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### entity:
Menace
* is danger
- threats
* new keyword that represents an existing ability.
Menopause
* Some menopause is part of adulthood
- maturity
* alleviates hot flashes, relieves pain and hyper-sensitivity.
* is time<|endoftext|>### entity:
Message
* are communication
- data structures which can be exchanged between different processes
* are located in fridges
- mail
- tables
- representations of the world
* are the mechanism that is used in order for objects to communicate with each other
- primary form of communications among nations
- vehicles by which information is passed between chares
- whispers of the soul
* definite construction in a definite language.
* is communication
- the information that the sender wants to transmit
* objects model electronic messages between users of a collaborative system.
* passing is the fundamental way in which objects interact
- technique used for communication between processes in parallel programs
- used to exchange data between nodes
- paradigm used widely on certain classes of parallel computers
- programming paradigm used to develop distributed applications
* string containing the human readable translation of the message.
* travel along the nerves as electrical impulses.
* travel from one nerve to another through chemicals called neurotransmitter
- the brain to the organs and limbs to enable the body to work
+ MSN, MSN Messenger: Microsoft websites :: Internet service providers :: Websites
* It is an instant messenger, which allows people to communicate through conversations over an internet connection. As well as conversations using text, this program also allows voice and video conversations. You can even use small 'emoticons' to express what you are trying to say. Messages are sent and received very quickly from around the globe. Its current messenger client is Windows Live Messenger.
+ Romeo and Juliet, The most famous scene: Plays by William Shakespeare
* This old house in Verona is called the 'House of Juliet'. Messages are stuck into the bricks.
+ Thames Barrier, Operation: River Thames :: Civil engineering :: Buildings and structures in England
* Closure begins about 9 hours before a dangerous high tide reaches the barrier. Messages give orders to stop river traffic, close subsidiary gates and alert other river users. As well as the Thames Barrier, the smaller gates along the Thames Tideway must be closed. Once river navigation has been stopped and all gates closed, then the Thames Barrier itself can be closed. The smaller gates are closed first, then the main navigable spans in succession. The gates remain closed until the tide downstream of the barrier falls to the same level as the water level upstream. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Molecule
* All molecules absorb electromagnetic radiation
- light or electromagnetic radiation at some particular set of wavelengths
- radiant energy at one wavelength of another
- are constantly in motion
* All molecules are in constant, random motion
- motion except at absolute zero
* All molecules have a molecular weight which is determined by their composite atoms
- dispersion forces
- move, even in ice and other solids
* Any molecule can become a free radical by either losing or gaining an electron
- has a mirror image
* Every molecule absorbs a specific type of light.
* Every molecule has corresponding copies of the molecule on the mind level
- dispersive forces
- multiple geometries
* Every molecule is an individual molecule and also a group of atoms
- in a constant cycle of birth and decay
- on average in a sate of lowest available energy, with no net force on it
- possesses a quantum mechanical description or equation
* Many molecules are asymmetrical
- incomplete and recombination seems to be a common event
* Many molecules can assume different states
- be both nucleophiles and electrophiles
- come in two varieties, one the mirror image of the other
- contain bonds that fall between the extremes of ionic and covalent bonds
- emit radiation at infrared wavelengths
- exhibit useful electronic properties
- form by identical atoms bonding together, like oxygen and nitrogen molecules
- glow, or fluoresce, when hit by ultraviolet light
- have one end that is slightly more positive and the other end slightly more negative
- macromolecule, such as a phospholipid
- move across membranes via diffusion
- obey what is known as the octet rule
- occurring in living organisms are very complex
- together compose a physical body, which is more than just a collection of molecules
* More molecules are squeezed into the same volume, therefore the molecules are closer together.
* More molecules have enough energy that many more collisions have the necessary activation energy
- sufficient energy to evaporate into water vapor
* Most molecules are far too small to be seen with the naked eye, but there are exceptions
- proteins or nucleic acids
- small, like methane
- attract one another until they come very close together, when they become repulsive
- have some rotatable bonds and consequently many low energy conformers
* Some molecules actually weigh more than others
- adopt a preferred orientation in a magnetic field
- aggregate in larger numbers
- are beautiful for their complexity, others are beautiful for their simplicity
* Some molecules are located in apes
- newts
- permissive for growth and guidance, while other molecules are inhibitory
- so long and skinny that they act like strands of spaghetti
- very light, such as amino acid
- become stimuli only if present while the cell is maturing
- can rotate and vibrate in many different ways
- come in both right and left handed forms
- consist of two atoms of the same element
- contain atoms with expanded octets
- gain enough speed to break free of all the bonds and evaporate
* Some molecules have regions of postive and negative charge - the water molecule good example
- the ability to assemble and take apart other molecules
- possess a magnetic moment comparable to that of an electromagnet
- receive a proton from a water molecule
- speed up, some slow down.
* are made up of atoms that are stuck together in a particular shape or form. Also, they like certain arrangements of atoms. For example, oxygen atoms always have two bonds with other atoms, carbon atoms always have four bonds with other atoms, and nitrogen atoms always have three bonds with other atoms
* absorb the UV light leading to ionization and release of a certain amount of energy.
* achieve maximum stability when electrons are shared between nuclei.
* act as very effective filters of light.
* also differ in how their atoms are arranged
- lose electrons in strong fields
- possess other types of energy that are quantized
* always pass from a region of high concentration to a region of lower concen- tration.
* appear in color as stick models, ball and stick, or space-filling.
* are a group of atoms
- academic journals
- also present in the straight and zigzag channels
- always in motion
- atoms held together by chemical bonds
- borderline microscopic
- built up from the atom, which is the basic unit of any chemical element
- capable of absorbing energy
- classified on the basis of their functional groups
* are close together and free to move past one another
- in a set pattern
- when they differ by few molecular fragments
- collections of nuclie which share common electrons
- colour-coded by orientation
- combinations of atoms
- constantly in rapid motion, moving about in their inter- molecular spaces
* are far apart and free to move past one another independently
- flexible, moving collections of atoms
- free to move in and out of our cubic foot of air
- groups of atoms held together with covalent bonds
* are groups of two or more atoms bound together by electromagnetic forces
- atoms connected by bonds that act like springs
* are held together by either covalent bonding or ionic bonding
- shared electron pairs, or covalent bonds
* are in constant chaotic motion moving in straight lines between collisions
- everything
- invisibly small, and they differ from the familiar objects of daily life
- kind of like building blocks, or lego
* are located in air
- hands
- minerals
- substances
* are made up of atom s that are held together by chemical bonds
- one or more atoms
- more complex than atoms
- notoriously difficult to guide and trap
- of a group soul nature, meaning that they tend to go along with the crowd
- on the move all the time
- only the tip of the iceberg
- part of donkeys
- real physical objects
* are sometimes in between
- the zero state, sometimes in the one state and sometimes in between
- stable when they have pairs of electrons around their nucleus
- structures containing two or more atoms chemically bound together
* are the basic structural units of chemical compounds
- building blocks of a cell
- nodes of the boolean network
- ordering of atoms
- signature of cool gas
- simplest possible samples of new substances called molecular compounds
- smallest units for chemical reactions
- tiny particles which make up every solid, liquid or gas
- too large to move freely through the membrane
* are two or more atoms held together by a chemical bond
- used for compounds
* are very small when compared to aerosols
- wavelength selective in the light they scatter
* attract each other.
* begin to form as elements from the stars escape into space
- interact as their concentration increases
* behave like oscillating dipoles
- the way they do because of their structure
* can also be chiral
- ions - polyatomic ions
- assume many shapes and sizes
* can be either pure or compound
- monatomic, diatomic or polyatomic
- three-dimensional and rotated to view from any angle
* can exist in a number of forms, one of the differences is that of the mirror image
- many conformations, depending on torsional angles, temperature, and presure
* can have different shapes
- specific and defined geometric shapes
- mix in solution to form a great variety of basic and acidic decompositional compounds
- move to a greater energy state only when energy is added to their system
- move, rotate, and molecular bonds can break
- obtain energy from radiation as well as from other molecules
- range in size from a few nanometers to a few micrometers
- slip over one another to adjust to the shape of their container
- vary greatly in size and complexity
* collide with one another and the sides of the container.
* combine appropriately to form cells.
* combine in different densities to create liquids, solids, and gasses
- specific ways to form microscopic cells
- through chemical reactions to form polymeric substances known as polymers
- with other molecules in chemical reactions
* compose our bodies.
* consist of more than one type of element
- one or more atoms of one or more elements joined by chemical bonds
* constantly collide and tend to move according to existing concentration gradients.
* contain atoms, and the nuclei of atoms act like tiny magnets
- identical atoms, Compounds contain atoms of at least two different elements
* containing only carbon and hydrogen are mostly insoluble in water.
* contains no hydrogen.
* continuously recognize and affect one another through chemical and physical interactions.
* differ in size and molecular weight as well as in structure.
* diffuse down a concentration gradient.
* encompass atoms.
* escape a dying star, carrying new atoms into space.
* evolve on the eubacterial tree of life.
* exit the cycle to form amino acids and carbohydrates.
* expand with heat and contract with cold.
* form crystals because of atomic attractions between specific points on the molecule.
* form when atomic orbitals overlap and form bonds
- atoms share electrons
- two or more atoms combine together
* fuse together, providing a better quality of metal.
* go from the random state to a state where they are lined up in a plane.
* have a way of looking alike
- definite, predictable shapes and structures
* have different behaviors in different circumstances or surroundings
- surroundings or circumstances
- degrees of polarity as determined by the functional group present
- light pulses and molecules transmit through their pulses
- many more lines than atoms
- minds
- thermal energy
* includes atoms.
* includes chemical chain
* interact each other
- through the substrate
- with magnetic and electric fields and with electromagnetic radiation
* interact, more or less, only with their nearest neighbors.
* is an unit
* join together to form all matter.
* lies on a four-fold axis.
* like to move from areas of higher pressure to lower pressure.
* line up parallel along grooves.
* make the brain's nerve cells do what they do.
* make up matter, of which cells are a part
* meet electrons.
* move all the time, but sometimes more than other
- and undergo chemical reaction in a framework of time
- farther apart so the air expands
- fast enough to escape the surface
* move faster and faster and are being bumped and bounced harder
- in hot bodies than in cold ones
- when they are warm
- fastest in a gaseous environment and slowest in a solid environment
- from an area or higher concentration to that of a lower concentration
* move in all directions and are in continual motion
- and out based on air motions and temperature
- much more rapidly in gaseous state than in a solid
* normally exist in discrete energy levels.
* occupying a place in infinity is an inconceivable proposition.
* only form in cold dense places.
* passively diffuse from regions of high to low concentration.
* penetrate the skin in a passive way - by diffusion.
* plays key role in cellular quality control machinery.
* produce infrared radiation at characteristic wavelengths when they vibrate or rotate.
* propagate in gas.
* react in many ways with the body Molecules react in many ways with the body
- to form crystals and supramolecules
- with temperature to form matter
* released by cancer cells can help detect recurrence of some types of cancer.
* repeal each other at small distances and attract at large distances.
* slow down when the temperature cools, molecules speed up when the temperature rises.
* stick to one another weakly by electrostatic attraction.
* tend to act like lazy people - they like to be at the lowest energy state
- move from the high energy side of the boundary to the low energy side
* then collide and heat it up when they pass objects
- draw back together, forming a shapeless lump of dirt and iron
* thereby fly relativly narrow together in relativly same direction.
* transfer their kinetic energy to other molecules through conduction.
* travel faster at higher temperatures, so they collide with other objects more frequently
* typically vibrate a small fraction of their interatomic separation.
* wander through the focal volume as they diffuse. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Motivation
* Comprehend the concept of motivation.
* acts as a means to achievement in education and an objective in education.
* affects all stages of information processing.
* also plays an important role in the learning process.
* big factor in the success or failure of dream recall.
* can change as situations alter
- contribute to performance anxiety
- have many definitions depending on the individual or organization
* causes a desire to studies.
* comes from inner needs, drives and goals
- in many forms
* complex construct and an important aspect of the human personality
- psychological state that involves both the affective and cognitive domains
* deals with the causes of goal-directed behaviour.
* depends on how well an individual's needs are met.
* disciplined personality.
* fundamental part of doing just about anything.
* has a very important role in cricket
- direct and indirect effects on perception and memory
* includes behaviors that illustrate interest, enthusiasm, appreciation, or dedication
- having confidence in oneself by controlling one s body, behavior, and world
* increases for making a positive impact on the lives of others.
* involves the understanding of the arousal, direction and persistence of behavior.
* is about making people want to work as effectively as they can
* is also a decisive factor in an individual s subjective perception of sleepiness
- factor involves a persons ability to communicate with others
- result of a particular history of reinforcement
- an Issue in Persuasion
- critical to success in school
* is an art that rests on effective interactions with others
- emotion
- entity
* is an essential aspect in the work world
- element of learning
- to perform at a higher level in any sport
* is an inner drive, an idea captured in the imagination
- force that compels behavior
* is an internal process through which humans wants, needs, and desires are satisfied
- state that arouses, directs, and maintains behaviour
- invisible ingredient that propels someone to action
- inward force which causes certain behavior
* is based on an individual, differential reward system
- having a meaning for life
- needs and fosters personal growth
- the subjective possibility of success
- upon needs, values, and goals
- basically an urge to do a specific thing
- central to human learning and is the foundation for all systems of education
- conditions
- determined by a complex blend of environment, attitude, and self-concept
- different things to different people
- energizing high levels of employee effort and performance
* is essential to employer success in getting things done through people
- fundamental to achievement in any field
- grounded directly in emotions, and only indirectly in circumstances
- inherently intrinsic, residing within oneself
* is one of the key factors in a successful learning environment
- more abstract factors of communication
- two most basic and most important qualities any individual can have
- represented by an employee's desire and commitment and is manifested as effort
* is the act of influencing an individual to take a desired course of action
- providing incentive as an incitement to action
- adult learner's own internal incentives and curiosity
- block of text that describes the motivation and purpose of the data model
- combination of a person's desire and energy directed at achieving a goal
- crucial point at which everyone fails
- desire or the urge to learn
- exploitation, manipulation and control of others for our own needs
- force that initiates, guides and maintains goal-oriented behaviors
- fuel that feeds employee productivity
* is the inner drive that makes people want to reach both personal and professional goals
- force that initiates action toward a specific end
- key factor to improving a child's study skills
* is the key to getting things done and enhancing creativity
- human actions
- learners actual desire to learn
- mechanism by which one's goals are met
- number one constant to all success
* is the process of energizing people to be productive
- satisfying internal needs through actions and behaviors
- whereby goal-directed activity is instigated and sustained
- purpose or psychological cause of an action
- push of the mental forces to accomplish an action
- reason the individual is giving the signal
- set of processes that moves a person toward a goal
- term for the factors that direct and energize behavior
- vital link between thought and action, knowing and doing
* is what drives an individual from the inside
- impels characters to say what they say and behave as they do
* key element in the educational process of producing caring, competent physicians
- for women reaching their goals
* level of awareness.
* major component of good management.
* occurs when the perceived benefits of a behavior clearly outweigh the perceived costs.
* often goes down as interest in friends, sports and the opposite sex increases
- plays a significant role in the learning process.
* ' is an important part of human psychology. It arouses a person to act towards a desired goal. It driving force which promotes action. For example, hunger motivation which causes a desire to eat. Motivation is the purpose or psychological cause of an action
* plays a major role in the classroom.
* prime factor in the art of self expression.
* refers to how much the patient is impelled to act on the desire to become sober
- whatever moves a person to action or to behave in a certain way
* relates to career choice.
* starts with knowing what is important to people. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Motive
* also play a role in attention.
* is an entity
* refer to internal states that arouse and direct behavior toward specific objects or goals.
+ Personality psychology, Different Perspectives of Personality Research
* Motives are another important factor to consider when studying the personality. Motives are forces that are influenced by an underlying need. A need is a manifestation of an internal biological or psychological state. Needs direct behavior and influence a persons state of being. When a need is not met, an individual will have a motive to fulfill that need. For example, every human being has a need for water. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Object
* ALL objects attract each other with a force of gravitational attraction.
* All objects absorb and emit radiation
- reflect visible light in different ways
- always emit some radiation
* All objects consist of many, many particles which are in constant motion
- matter
- continuously emit light of some wavelength or another
* All objects emit electromagnetic energy in varying wavelengths and directions
- waves
- energy at levels determined by their temperature
- heat in the form of electromagnetic radiation
- heat, and the hotter an object, the shorter the wavelength of radiation it emits
- infrared radiation
- invisible infrared energy
- light if they are heated to a sufficiently high temperature
- measurable infrared energy
- some energy in the form of radiation
- thermal energy or heat unless they have a temperature of absolute zero
- various levels of infrared energy
- exert a gravitational attraction on other objects
- experience a buoyant force when immersed in a fluid
- fall due to gravity
- generate electromagnetic radiation
* All objects give off heat
- or reflect light
* All objects have a center of buoyancy
- centre of gravity
- certain temperature and emit waves of thermal energy called infrared radiation
- force of attraction to one another
- gravitational field which attracts other objects
* All objects have a natural frequency or set of frequencies at which they vibrate
- frequency, or rate of vibration, depending on their size and shape
- continuum radiation
* All objects have internal energy manifested by the microscopic motions of particles
- kinetic energy
- mass, velocity, moments of inertia, and other real-world properties
- weight
- naturally emit infra-red radiation in proportion to their surface temperature
- possess mass
- radiate in many wavelengths
- reflect a certain amount of electromagnetic energy
- resist changes in their state of motion
- take up mass
- transfer thermal energy by infrared radiation
* Any object expands when heated and contracts when cooled
- made of an elastic material has a natural period of vibration
- moving away from a dog triggers an instinctive urge to bite
* Every object attracts every other object, by virtue of their having mass
- being with a soul
* Every object emits electromagnetic radiation
- energy with wavelengths characterisic for the object's temperature
- some form of electromagnetic radiation
- exerts a gravitational force on every other object
* Every object has a center of gravity somewhere
- characteristic spectra in the infrared spectrum
- mass and a contour
- set of coordinates that define a position in the two-dimensional space
- unique natural frequency of vibration
- an absolute center position where all forces exerted by the body equal zero
- is made up of matter
- maintains a constant velocity unless acted upon by an unbalanced force
- pulls on every other object gravitationally equally and in the opposite direction
* Many objects are about as deep as they are wide
- too large to leave the stomach
- reveal different aspects of their behavior at different wavelengths
* Most objects contain the same number of protons and elec-trons and, therefore, carry no charge
- emit radiation at many wavelengths
- give off several frequencies of energy simultaneously
* Most objects have a wavelength that is too small to be detected
- close to zero net electric charge since they are made of neutral atoms
- tend to absorb infrared rather than reflect it
- weigh more than the air that they replace and therefore settle to the ground
* Some objects are luminous - they give off their own light
- more difficult to photograph than others
- so small they fail to register on the retina and hence are too tiny to be seen
- sources of light
- can change shape reversibly
- carry electrical charges and create electric fields
- decay much faster than others
* Some objects emit light only in certain wavelengths
- only radio waves or only X-rays
- very little or no visible light, but do emit radio signals
- fade faster simply because their chemical bonds break down faster
* Some objects have mental properties
- multiple pointings
- sharp geometric features such as corners and creases
- occur in nature while others have been designed by people to solve human problems
* Some objects reflect infrared radiation and some absorb it
- radio wave better than others
- reflect, as well as emit, infrared energy
- roam the oceans for decades before finally coming ashore
* Some objects sink in water, some float, and others remain suspended
- when placed in water and others float on the surface
- take up more space, and some take up a small amount of space
- tend to vibrate at a single frequency and they are often said to produce a pure tone
* absorb some colors and reflect others
- wavelengths of light and reflect others
* acquire a terrible weight when they are no longer attached to people
- information and behavior from other objects
* appear brighter or darker relative to the amount of light energy they reflect
- different as the times of day changes
* appear to be a particular color because they reflect some wavelengths more than others
- different colours because they absorb some wavelengths and reflect others
- float through the air by themselves
* are a reflection of the real world and represent our perception of that world
- able to store energy as a result of their position
- abstract data types that are used to represent operating system resources
- abstractions of real-world entities that exhibit states and behaviors
- also collections of behaviours that control and manipulate their associated data
- always in the light
- any data that can be used in an application or shared with other applications
- attracted toward the earth, because of their mass
- complementary to subjectivity in the constitution of consciousness
- components of object models
- computer science
- constantly rubbing against the Earth and the layer of air it pulls along
- constituents
- content
- dead, lifeless, without any inner vitality or consciousness of their own
- electronic things
- encodings of ideas, physical entities, immaterial entities, concepts, or patterns
* are entities or people that change as a result of the action
- which have parts and behavior
- idealizations of real world objects
- in free fall when gravity is the only force affecting their motion
- instances of interfaces, on which clients can perform operations
- intances of a class
- just data structures in memory, and are referenced by their address
- known to accelerate down inclined planes because of an unbalanced force
- like cells
* are located in basements
- drawers
- trash
- made up of different materials
- modules which contain BOTH data and instructions in self contained units
- moving, they collide and they move apart
- natural things to model because that's what the world is made of
- nouns
- part of sentences
* are pieces of code that can be used to build larger systems more simply
- data that can be packaged and manipulated by the programmer
- memory with the same structure that can be used again and again
- re-usable software components, combining code and attributes
- representational constructs of entities
- runtime manifestations of a class that exist in a computer's memory
- similar to entities, except that they have no graphical or geometric meaning
- smaller when they are cold, larger when hot
* are software entities that contain their own programming code
- representations of real-world entities
- temporary configurations of energy and matter into recognizable forms
* are the currency of object oriented design
- geometric figures being created and manipulated
- parts of individuals
- principal building blocks of object-oriented programs
- things that have properties
- visible by their being perceived, but have no shadows
* belong to types that define the names and signatures of their methods.
* can also change in volume, if they experience a force from all sides
- take on a different appearance because of their particular chemical compositions
* can be highly reflective, often acting much like a mirror
- opaque in one region of the electromagnetic spectrum and transparent in another
- stationary or moving with constant linear velocity
- begin to move gradually, and accelerate, or spin gently to a stop
- exert forces on each other at a distance
- have a position, a velocity, and an acceleration
- only produce radiation that is about as large as the object itself
- represent a wide variety of entities
- rotate, revolve around others, or move along curves
- symbolize one s sexuality and desire
* contain energy in a variety of forms.
* die when they no longer grow, evolve, or change in correlation with our lives.
* differ in that they have identity.
* displace their volume in a fluid.
* do gain speed as they fall.
* emit energy because they absorb energy
- light in different wavelengths
- more intense radiation at higher frequencies as they are heated
* emitting as blackbodies give off more energy per surface area as they get hotter
- heat show up as white images
* exist in cells.
* feel warmer or colder to the touch.
* float better in hot water than in cold water
- if they're lighter than the amount of liquid that they displace, or push aside
- or sink as a result of their density
- when they are less dense than water
* fly through the air, stars wheel through the universe.
* get smaller and smaller as they approach the horizon
- their color from pigments that act to absorb some colors of light and reflects others
* give off tiny molecules of themselves into the air.
* have a natural surface tension and a higher rigidity, or resistance to applied force
- hierarchies, types, compositions, polymorphism
- kinetic energy because they are moving
- length, width, and height
* have many observable properties, including size, mass, shape, color, and temperature
- mass, which is how much matter an object contains
* have properties that can be measured using standard metric units
- observed using the senses
* have properties, including identity, state, behavior, lifetime, and boundary
- parts and relations to one another
- size and weight
- state and behavior
- surfaces
* have the ability to be represented linguistically
- do things
- same color throughout their lifetime
* having higher masses have higher inertia.
* hitting our atmosphere usually burn up because they are hitting it so fast.
* illuminated with monochromatic light can only exhibit that single color.
* immersed in liquids are subject to the phenomenon of buoyancy.
* lose their charge very fast in humid air.
* made by prehistoric people are called artifacts
- of matter can exert forces on each other, causing changes in their motion
* make arcs through the sky due to the Earth's rotation
- up the substance of the world
* move in space as they move in time
- the direction they are pushed or pulled
- much more slowly through very cold liquids than through warm liquids
* move through absolute space
- various states as they are influenced by outside stimuli
* moving have kinetic energy that can be transmitted to other objects
- in circles have a speed which is equal to the distance traveled per time of travel
* occupy regions of spacetime.
* often have parts which are objects.
* only weigh something when there resistance to their falling.
* oriented languages have special language mechanisms to support data abstraction
- processing is used for storage and transfer of information
* oriented programming allows for extension of an objects function or of class function
- design philosophy
- involves the partitioning of a program into classes and methods
- systems deal with objects which have properties and methods
* physical entity
* play the role of abstract containers of information.
* reach thermal equilibrium by transferring heat back and fourth.
* refers to an application , file, folder and other processes.
* resist changes in their motion
* retain heat, and as duly noted, post ice-out panfish gravitate toward heat
- the same mass, wherever they are
* rise at low altitude and easterly azimuth and get higher and move westward.
* seem to disappear when they go away because of the laws of perspective.
* simplify programming by promoting abstraction, inheritance, encapsulation, and polymorphism.
* sink or float in water.
* take heat and reradiate it at different wavelengths.
* tend to be smooth, symmetric, and move like rigid bodies
- lose potential energy whenever possible
* thus acquire a radiance, and begin to glow
- have color because they absorb some wavelengths and reflect others
* typically emit waves of many kinds at the same time.
+ Fossil, Types of fossils: Paleontology
* Fossilized excrement, faeces or dung is known as a 'coprolite'. Chemical traces of prehistoric organisms is called a 'chemofossil'. Objects made by prehistoric people are called artifacts.
+ Object (computer science): Computer programming
* In Object-oriented programming, an 'object' is an instance of a Class. Objects are an abstraction. They hold both data, and ways to manipulate the data. The data is usually not visible outside the object.
+ Programming language, Object-Oriented Programming
* Objects are pieces of memory with the same structure that can be used again and again. A bank account, bitmap, or hero from a video game could all be objects within a program. A Dog object might have properties like height and hairColor.
* All objects are created from templates called classes. You can think of a class as a mold from which objects are made. The class defines all the properties and methods that its objects will have. Objects created from a class are called 'instances' of the class. A class can 'extend' another class, which means that it takes all the properties and methods of the class but can add its own. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Peroxide
* Most peroxide reacts with compounds
- organic compounds
* Some peroxide combines with chloride.
* Some peroxide reacts with metallic potassium
* ' is an ion. Peroxide can be a reducing agent or an oxidizing agent. More often it is an oxidizing agent. It can be reduced to oxide or oxidized to oxygen. Hydrogen peroxide is the most common peroxide. Barium peroxide is another peroxide
* actually dissolves the blood.
* also can react with molecules in the cell to form free radicals.
* are a group of compounds that contain an oxygen-oxygen bond
- an extremely sensitive byproduct formed when a compound reacts with air
- explosive
- extremely sensitive to trace metal contamination, which causes rapid decomposition
- low power explosives and very sensitive to shock and heat
* can accumulate in open containers of ether.
- highly reactive, powerful oxidizers, and highly flammable
- violently explosive in concentrated form or as solids
- form after long-time storage with exposure to air
* concentrated in the residue can pose a serious explosive hazard.
* creates small bubbles in the mouth which massage the gums providing a cleaning sensation.
* dissolves in water.
* does tissue damage, especially when used undiluted.
* frequently react to form free radicals.
* generally develop over time from air oxidation.
* have a specific half-life, or rate of decomposition, under any given set of conditions.
* is also ineffective in preventing halitosis
- lethal if consumed in excess
* is an antiseptic which kills some mouth germs
- indirect product of the occasional incomplete reduction of oxygen to water
- essentially super-oxygenated water
- great for removing dry, crusty blood from stitches
- water with lots of oxygen
* react with DNA to cause mutations and react with membranes.
* typically is used for bleaching hair and disinfecting minor wounds.
* used to color enhance hair are difficult to remove and cause the color to fade. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Person
* All persons are born free and equal, because they have reason and conscience
- equal in human dignity
* All persons are free and equal in dignity and rights
- by nature and are equal in their inherent and inalienable rights
- persons who have changes in their sense organs
- rational, and rationality is defined in terms of single-minded pursuit of wealth
* All persons born in the United States are citizens of the United States
- States, including the children of illegal aliens, are natives
- or naturalized in the United States are citizens of the United States
- have genetic predispositions to exercise
- live by being members of a species, specifically humanity
- lose bone with age
* Any person can become allergic to latex
- develop problems of substance abuse or dependence
- get salmonellosis, but it is recognized more often in infants and children
- see that much of human life is made of pain and suffering
- has the ability to change their perception, thinking, behavior and reality
* Every person attaches meaning to objects, people and events that are different for each individual
- being, and so is every animal
- belongs to a nation, but people express that differently
* Every person born into the human race is born blind or lost
- or naturalized citizen, regardless of race
- can play a vital role in society
- carrier for about ten rare genetic conditions
* Every person carries abnormal genes
- thousands of genes
- two alleles of most genes
* Every person child of god and every human being is entitled to full human rights
- someone
* Every person consists of a body and soul
- mortal flesh and immortal soul
- contains alleles-alternate forms of genes
- differs from the other, either physically or psychologically
- dreams, and every dreamer kind of artist
- earns the death penalty from the womb
* Every person experiences a broad range of emotions
- pain from time to time, the pain can be acute or chronic
- farmer because they raise their own food
* Every person has a body and within that body soul, and that soul is eternal
- body, soul and spirit
- conscious mind and subconsicous mind
- destiny in life and everyone has a soul mate somewhere in the world
* Every person has a different level of connection to their body, mind, spirit and emotions
- of resistance to toxic substances
- diverse background and heritage that originated in other countries of the world
- given name and a surname
- human body for the express purpose of performing actions
- mood cycle
- pair of genes that determine their eye color, one from each parent
- patrimony
* Every person has a right to freedom of thought and expression
- privacy, and a duty to respect the rights of others
- sexual orientation
- soul and body
- spirit, regardless of their spiritual condition a
* Every person has a spiritual dimension and each person's spirituality is unique
* Every person has a unique genetic makeup
- set of genes which are inherited from their parents
- way of responding to stress
* Every person has an equal capacity for good and for evil
- right to achieve a high standard of living
- important role as a link in the network of society
- inborn worth and can contribute to the human community
- incontestable right to live in a healthy and clean environment
- aspects of themselves that are invisible and yet very real
- at least five different intelligences
- by birth a human nature that is sinful and spiritually rebellious
* Every person has different forms of motivation
- needs, goals, preferences, and habits when it comes to eating
- psychological and physical needs or desires
- dignity and self worth
- economic, social and cultural rights
- human rights regardless of race, sex, language, belief or religion
- hundreds of bursae scattered throughout the body
- inherent worth and dignity
- physical life
* Every person has the ability to change our world
- right and the obligation to make responsible sexual choices
* Every person has the right to equal individual dignity and worth
- freedom and respect and the right to be treated fairly by others
- freedom of opinion and expression
- freedom of personal assembly and association
- freedom of religion
- grow in dignity and develop as a person
- life, liberty and security
- life, liberty, and security of person
- live in a healthy and balanced environment
- live, to be happy, and free
- personal liberty and security
- work, to just pay, and to form and join unions
- their own objective truth, which is viewed as subjective truth by everyone else
- tissue that continually rebuilds itself to adjust to changing mechanical loads
* Every person has two copies of each gene, one inherited from each parent
- genes of that gene series, one on each of a pair of chromosomes
- kidneys
- mammary arteries
- unique footprints and toe prints
- worth as an individual
- inherits blessings and curses from previous generations
* Every person is an energy transmuter
- at risk for cancer
* Every person is at risk of exposure to blood-borne pathogens
- foodborne illness
- blind to at least one colour
- born free and equal in dignity and rights
* Every person is born with a brain that functions as an immensely powerful processor
- brain that is an immensely powerful processor
- capable of success and every person is capable of being an achiever
- classified as one of two animals
* Every person is different in the way they use their footwear
- when it comes to opinions, taste and expectations
- effected by obesity, directly or indirectly
* Every person is entitled to dignity and respect, regardless of race or color
- life, dignity, and freedom
- the freedom of speech and expression including publication
* Every person is guaranteed freedom of assembly and association
- guilty of being and doing evil
- involved in education at some time of their life
* Every person is made up of many characteristics-mental as well as physical
- many of the same characteristics-mental as well as physical
- the genes they receive from there parents at the time of conception
- part of nature
- responsible for the welfare of the planet
- special in some way and is different from every other person on earth
- unique, autistic or non-autistic
- living has a world and life view
- loves to laugh, especially children
- makes a difference in the quality of life
- model of life, so the true nature of a person is the nature of life
- needs to love and be loved
- operates in a set of beliefs
- plays many roles in life
* Every person potential victim of rape or sexual assault
- product of a cultural background and cultural environment
- responds differently to stress
- sheds thousands of tiny skin particles every minute
- sinner both by birth and by choice
- suffering from an eating disorder is extremely underweight
- transmits regular biological signals
- travels at a different rate of speed
- unique, precious being of dignity and worth
* Many persons continue to believe, in varying degrees, in traditional indigenous religions
- fear senility or some other form of disability
* Many persons have problems with side effects of their seizure medications
- some sort of color blindness, often a red-green deficiency
- the experience of seeming to be located in space away from their physical body
- prefer to adopt newborns
- struggle with significant lifestyle changes after suffering a heart attack
* Many persons suffer and sometimes despair from sickness and disease
- greatly from syndromes for which no specific cause can be found
- use an alternate form of contraception or none at all
* Most persons can do their part by eating well and exercising regularly
- donate blood
* Most persons develop a tolerance for bee venom in time
- asthma in childhood, but some people develop asthma as adults
- immunity and become carriers
- diagnose their own asthma when they begin to wheeze
- equate apparent color with hue
- exhibit severe memory disturbance, agitation, anorexia, and hallucinations
* People accept reality.
* People achieve comfort
* People acquire chances
- contact
- immunodeficiency
- interest
- knowledge
- act as representatives
* People adopt diets
- vegetarian diets
* People apply breathe techniques
- forces
- tension forces
- upward forces
- various techniques
* People are affected by diseases
- alcoholics
* People are bad drivers
- tempereds
- bazaar
- betters
- bitten by bats
- blinds
- blond
- brunettes
- bullies
- bus drivers
- business executives
- calculators
* People are capable of attempt suicide
- babies
- bites
- blinks
- breathes
- can vegetables
- cast shadows
- chokes
- coding
- complete sentences
- converse
- cook food
- counts
- crowd elevators
- dances
- eats
* People are capable of fish fish
- lakes
- friends
- further education
- gays
- hands
- holdings
- judges
- jumps
- kayaks
- laughs
- leaps
- lose keys
- lower expectations
- masters
- meet makers
- milk cows
- open doors
- passengers
- plans
- plant trees
- promise
- race cars
- rush jobs
- sail boats
- share knowledge
- shouts
* People are capable of smoke marijuana
- pots
- sneezes
* People are capable of speak language
- words
- speaks
- spear fish
- sprints
- stands
- thinks
- treks
- washing dishs
* People are capable of water gardens
- plants
- caring
- celebrities
- chefs
- chemists
- christians
- clerks
- cold
* People are complex organisms
- systems
- computer programmers
- construction workers
- created by gods
- criminals
- dancing
- dark coloreds
- democrats
- drifters
* People are engaged in behavior
- target behavior
- entrepreneurs
* People are evolved from animals
- apes
- fairs
- families
- fat
- firemans
- geologists
* People are good drivers
- pilots
- grocers
- groups
- hairdressers
- hard working
- headaches
- human bodies
- humans
- hypocrites
- idiots
- individuals
- interior designers
- janitors
- jerks
- kinds
- laborers
- lawyers
- liars
- light coloreds
* People are located in apartments
- audiences
- bookstores
- buildings
- bus stops
- carnivals
- cities
- classrooms
- conferences
- convention
- crowds
- demonstrations
- desks
- fairy tales
- football stadiums
- funerals
- garages
- hospitals
- malls
- national parks
- operas
- public places
- race tracks
- roadblock
- rugs
- ships
- shops
- shows
- space shuttles
- state parks
- street corners
- supermarkets
- synagogues
- tanks
- theaters
- towns
- train stations
- universes
- vehicles
- water fountains
- websites
- weddings
- zoos
- made of water
- magazines
- managers
- means
- messengers
- movie stars
- musicals
- neurotics
- night people
- normals
- pagans
* People are part of humanity
- natural worlds
- preambles
- societies
- peacemakers
- physicians
- podiatrists
- politicians
- professional athletes
- psychologists
- racists
- receptionists
- scientists
- secretaries
- self interesteds
- shorts
- smarts
- social workers
- specials
- stranges
- talls
- teachers
- telephone operators
- thins
- translators
- truck drivers
* People are used for exploitation
- help
- lovings
- populations
- social interaction
- talk
- teachs
- worship
- veterinarians
* People assist in procedures
- support roles
* People assume multiple roles
* People attain average height
* People avoid intestinal problems
* People bear burdens
- entire burdens
* People become experts
- users
- board trains
* People bring comfort
- skills
* People buy chickens
- mammals
- products
- turkeys
* People can have descendants
- symptoms
- care for babies
* People carry cysts
* People cause a desire to cries
- accidents
- fatal accidents
* People change diets
- locations
- choose battles
- collect information
* People come from tradition
- in contact
- into offices
- out of bathrooms
- through doors
* People come to conclusions
- unhappy conclusions
- compare unicorns
- complete duties
* People conduct analyses
- chemical analyses
- consider food
* People consult care doctors
- primary care doctors
* People consume amounts
- calories
- enough calories
- juice
- sodium diets
- contract diseases
* People contribute to accidents
- decisions
- final decisions
- control animals
- crave sugar
* People create disturbances
- documents
- initial disturbances
- will
- deal with death
- declare interest
* People depend on animals
- utility functions
- derive from ancestors
* People descend from animals
- deserve rights
* People desire accurate results
- acknowledgement
- addeds
- admiration
- adoration
- advantage
- affluence
- agreement
- ambitions
- american dreams
- answers
- antiques
- applause
- autonomy
- back rubs
- bagels
- bargains
- basic necessity
- beef
- beers
- better jobs
- bicycles
- big families
- birthday parties
- bladder control
- blonde hair
- blowjobs
- brains
- breakfasts
- cable modems
- cakes
- candy
- caregivers
- central heat
- champions
- clarity
* People desire clean air
- cleans
* People desire clear rules
- vision
- closures
- clothing
- coffee breaks
- cold beers
- college degrees
- comfort food
- comfortable shoes
- communication
- complementeds
- confidence
- confident children
- conflict resolution
- congratulation
- consistency
- contenteds
- convenient parking
- conversations
- cotton candy
- courage
- creativity
- critical thinking
- dedication
- delicious food
- details
- devotion
- dialogue
- diamonds
- dinner
- discounts
- distance runs
- diversity
- dogs
- donuts
- drink water
- drives
- easy money
- electricity
* People desire enough sleep
- equal opportunity
- equality
- escapes
- esteem
- eternal salvation
- evidence
- examples
- experiments
- explanations
- facials
- facts
- fair treatments
- fairness
- faith
* People desire fast cars
- services
- fellowship
* People desire financial security
- stability
- finds
- fitnesses
- flies
- flowers
- foots
- forgiveness
- fortune
* People desire free food
- rides
- stuff
* People desire freedom of expression
- french food
* People desire fresh air
- breaths
- eggs
- fruit
- produce
- strawberries
- tomatos
- fuckeds
- fulls
- futures
- garlics
- german cars
- gets
- gifts
- giraffes
- gold
* People desire good citizens
- credit
- deals
- entertainment
- eyesights
- government
- grades
- homes
- houses
- insulation
- kids
- listeners
- looking
- luck
- neighbors
- posture
- relationships
- reviews
- values
- gratification
- great things
* People desire green grass
- thumbs
- haircuts
- hamburgers
* People desire happy families
- health insurance
* People desire healthy bones
- environments
- helpful hints
- heros
* People desire high achievers
- wages
- hobbies
- holds
- honoreds
- hope
- hospitalities
- huggeds
- hugs
- human contact
- hunger
- ice cream
- identities
- improve performance
- independence
- indoor plumbing
- influence
- inner peace
- inspiration
- intellectual stimulation
- jewellery
- job security
- justice
- kings
- knowns
- lands
- larger houses
- laughter
- leaders
- leisure time
- lemonades
- lickeds
- longevities
- lovers
- loving relationships
- loyalty
- lunch money
- luxuries
- magic
- mail
- mangos
- massages
* People desire material things
- materialism
- meaningful work
- medical care
- mobiles
- moms
- morals
* People desire more information
- mores
- moves
- mutual respect
- mysteries
- nanotechnologies
- neededs
* People desire new computers
- ideas
- toys
- nicotine
- noodles
- noticeds
- nourishment
- novelty
- open mindeds
- orange
- orgasm
- parental approval
- partners
- passions
- patience
* People desire personal care
- pictures
* People desire play games
- sports
- playfulness
- popularity
- pornography
* People desire positive reinforcement
- thoughts
- praiseds
- pretzels
- privacies
- proof
- prosperity
- pugs
- quick responses
- quiet
- raises
- real things
- relaxation
- reliability
- reliable information
- rewards
- ripe fruit
- romance
- safes
- sanity
- savings
- scented candles
- second chances
* People desire self confidence
- shade trees
* People desire share information
- shelter
- simple truth
- simplicity
- snacks
- snakes
- snow skis
- socials
- solutions
- sound sleep
- spare time
- specific instruction
- spell checkers
- spicy food
- sponsors
- spouses
- square dances
- stable relationships
- stables
- straight tooths
- strength
- strokeds
- strong bones
- studies
- successful life
- sunlight
- sunny days
- sunshine
- surpriseds
- sweet fruit
- sweets
- swims
- sympathy
- tacos
- talent
- tallers
- tax refunds
- technology
- tenderness
- thick hair
- tobacco
- true love
- turtles
- tv
- unconditional love
- unrequited love
- useful information
- vacation
- validations
- valueds
- victories
- video games
- volcanic eruptions
* People desire warm baths
- beds
- weather
- wellnesses
- wisdom
- world peace
- destroy homes
* People develop diseases
- feelings
- health problems
- other health problems
* People develop poor habits
- sleep habits
- sensitivity
- threaten diseases
- die from illnesses
* People die in fire
* People die of causes
- natural causes
- discontinue treatments
* People discover diets
- optimal diets
- display behavior
* People do activities
- tests
- tremendous damage
- draw attention
* People eat apricot seeds
- beans
- beets
- birds
- carbohydrates
- fatty food
- ferns
- hamburger meat
- healthy food
- meals
- oysters
- potato
- raw oysters
- red meat
- seafood
* People employ in activities
- occupations
- encounter worms
* People engage in activities
* People enjoy basketball
- customer services
- long life
- play basketball
* People enter hobbies
* People enter into life
- states
- stages
* People exhibit anxiety reaction
- odd behavior
- particular behavior
- problem behavior
* People experience attraction
- crises
- difficulty
- heartburn
- illumination
- odor
- pinch sensation
- psychological pain
- serious reaction
- sexual attraction
* People experience strong emotion
- thirsts
* People express concern
- remorse
* People feel affection
- like people
- much pain
* People find anxiety
- experimentation
- improvement
- lists
- topics
- finish diets
- focus on sources
* People follow diets
- steps
* People gain experience
- life experience
* People get adequate nutrition
- cards
- diarrhea
- glimpses
- license
- lung cancer
- medical treatments
- sting
* People give advice
- false information
- guidance
- right answers
- valuable advice
- grasp hands
- grow up in families
* People hate cobras
* People have allergic reaction
- antibodies
- appetite
- attachment
- awareness
- bad habits
- black hair
- blood flow problems
- blue eyes
- body parts
- boxes
* People have brown eyes
- capability
- clear senses
- complex problems
- consciousness
- cortisol excretion
* People have different beliefs
- ears
- eat habits
- emotional states
- enemies
- favorite color
- feet
- fingerprints
- flaws
- fruit vegetables
- glands
* People have good habits
- physical health
- grandparents
- growth hormones
* People have have contact
- negative experience
- heads
- health conditions
* People have healthy eat habits
- hearts
- horrible posture
- intake
- intentions
- irritate skin
- issues
- itchy reaction
- large homes
* People have male organs
- sex organs
- manufactureds
- many talent
- mild symptoms
- minds
- missions
- moles
- moral rights
- mouths
- muscles
- names
- noses
- notions
- nutritious dinner
- offsprings
- outward symptoms
- played sports
- proteins
- psychological illnesses
- red hair
- religious beliefs
- responsibility
- restrictions
- sides
- smell
- soft bodies
- sole responsibility
- souls
- specific religious beliefs
- spiritual experience
- strong attachment
- such conditions
- sufficient capacity
- sweat glands
- teeth
- terminal illnesses
- urinary excretion
- want
- water restrictions
- year experience
- hear dogs
- help problems
- hire assistants
- hold pets
* People identify fingerprint patterns
* People includes arms
- body substances
- cell membranes
- cells
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- legs
- material bodies
- necks
- nuclei
- personality
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
- incorporate techniques
- increase intake
- influence decisions
* People ingest food
- mushrooms
- poisonous mushrooms
* People inhabit countries
- inhale air
* People inherit autosomal recessive patterns
- involve in preparation
- join companies
* People keep animals
- in minds
* People kill animals
- insects
* People know answers
- circumstances
- officers
- owners
- purposes
- weakness
* People lack confidence
- medical qualifications
* People lead lifestyle
- sedentary lifestyle
* People learn about dinosaurs
- tasks
- leave homes
- lie on beds
* People like animals
- butterflies
- cats
- chipmunks
- rabbits
* People limit activities
- physical activities
* People live for many years
* People live in areas
- challenge environments
- climates
- develop countries
- geographic areas
- live conditions
- temperate climates
- urban areas
- vicinities
* People live on diets
- typical diets
* People look at clock faces
- dolphins
- for sources
* People lose blood
- fathers
- kidney functions
- perspiration
* People love animals
- hummingbirds
- owls
- parrots
- whales
* People maintain components
- horizontal components
* People make calculations
- careers
- conscious decisions
- creations
- differences
- effort
- examinations
- measurements
- noise
- representations
- sing careers
- trips
* People may have ability
- fevers
- follow characteristics
- great natural ability
- protective effects
- severe symptoms
- types
* People meet goals
- requirements
- monitor levels
* People move food
* People must have good taste
* People need assistance
- extra oxygen
- eyelids
- fluid
* People need immediate assistance
- medical assistance
- knees
- nutrients
- such assistance
* People observe behavior
- flight
* People obtain further information
* People occupy passenger seats
* People offer proof
- suggestions
- open eyes
* People own animals
- dangerous animals
- pay attention
* People perform actions
- health care procedures
- such duties
- surgical procedures
* People pick up pets
* People play different roles
* People possess minds
- pour water
- prepare food
* People present articles
- statements
* People press buttons
- control buttons
* People produce bile
- insulin
- propose offers
* People provide assistance
* People purchase books
- goods
* People raise animals
* People reach adulthood
- maturity
- old ages
- skeletal maturity
- react to food
* People read books
- essays
- short essays
* People receive attention
- benefits
- dose treatments
* People receive immediate attention
- medical attention
- lump sum benefits
* People receive medical attention
- news
- patents
- permission
- social security benefits
- steroid therapy
* People recover from diseases
- infectious diseases
- regain health
* People rely on information
- remain in states
- remove bait
- report beliefs
- request services
* People require care
* People require rich food
- protein food
- resemble apes
* People reside in regions
- tropical regions
* People respond to oral therapy
- stimuli
* People restrict carbohydrate intake
- save life
- say in statements
* People search for many possible ways
* People see babies
- best friends
- different values
- images
- sunset
* People seek advice
- protection
- send letters
- serve purposes
* People share attitude
- general attitude
* People share same attitude
* People should have fundamental human rights
- show behavior
* People sign consent documents
- inform consent documents
* People sit in chairs
- empty chairs
- quiet rooms
* People stand on sidewalks
- stools
* People start diets
* People stay in places
- with mothers
- study earth
* People submit fingerprints
- questionnaires
* People suffer from abdominal pain
- ailment
- allergies
- bacterial infection
- respiratory ailment
- health issues
* People survive to ages
- reproductive ages
* People sustain burns
- serious burns
- swallow fish
* People take actions
- appropriate actions
- aspirin
- blood pressure
- calcium
- extra care
- high pressure
- medicine
- necessary actions
- other necessary actions
- over care
- photos
- teach children
* People to develop life skills
- give consent
- identify amphibians
- lose weight
* People to participate in activities
- sexual activities
- pay assessments
* People to provide care services
* People to provide personal care services
* People to share experience
- touch spoons
* People train in appropriate procedures
- transmit diseases
- undergo treatments
* People understand battles
- development
- situations
* People use ability
- bread
- knives
- methods
- schools
- wood
- utilize services
- visit regions
- want dogs
- wash hands
* People watch animals
- movies
* People wear canada goose jackets
- garments
- hats
* People weigh lbs
* People will have breaths
- outcomes
- same reaction
* People work for several years
* People work in areas
- grain storage areas
- under supervision
- write articles
* Some persons are more likely than others to develop venous thrombosis
- unable to swallow their saliva fast enough to prevent drooling
* Some persons become anxious when they lose their spiritual focus
- hypersensitive to certain substances and react by rashes, sneezing, asthma, etc
- believe that dreams have certain fixed meanings
* Some persons develop agoraphobia after a panic attack in a typical agoraphobic situation
- numbness and burning or tingling of the hands, feet, or legs
- do inherit the tendency for heartburn
* Some persons experience a mild headache immediately after smoking
- themselves as having a homosexual orientation
- feel poverty or poverty consciousness about themselves
* Some persons have exercise-induced asthma, which is caused by varying degrees of exercise
- gum recession on one or more teeth
- mental retardation because of genetic conditions
- mild flu-like symptoms, dark urine, light stools, jaundice, fatigue, and fever
- only mild diarrhea and indigestion
- problems in coping tied to ingrained habits
- later develop lung scarring after such exposures
- notice flu-like symptoms before they notice cramps or diarrhea
- produce a larger amount of ear wax than others
- report that their behavior changes when they are dressed en femme
- say they talk differently, adopt feminine speech patterns
- take drugs out of curiosity or because of social pressures from their friends
- talk simply because they think sound is more manageable than silence
- use email as means to harass people
* act for their own sakes by acting according to reason, and reason reflects reality.
* are a holistic unity of the physical, psychological, social and spiritual
- holistic, complex biological, psychological, social, cultural, and spiritual beings
- objects and sources both of communication, and of love
- social beings before they are aware of having their own distinctive personalities
* asphyxiated are frequently in a state of only apparent death.
* assume responsibility for health through their life choices.
* born in the U.S. or to U.S. citizens in foreign countries are citizens of the United States
- under different tithis have distinct personality differences
* can optimize their health by making choices based on their understanding of environment.
* commonly react emotionally to the diagnosis of Diabetes.
* differ greatly in their reactivity to sunlight.
* discursively position themselves or others, and thereby, co-construct identities.
* enjoy maximum legal and moral rights, including the right to life.
* enter life through mortal birth and, in due time, disappear through the veil of death.
* exposed to cigarette smoke have significantly higher rates of lung cancer than other people.
* express wholeness in thoughts, feelings and behaviors.
* following ethnic diets tend to show a different order of allergenicity.
* functional unity of a biological organism.
* have the ability to affect their own health, and are responsible for their choices.
* is an immortal soul imprisoned in a mortal body
- understood to include individuals, families, groups, and communities
* living in Somalia, Afghanistan, and Haiti experience the highest food deficit in the world.
* recovering from yellow fever have lifelong immunity against reinfection.
* refers to diversity.
* related to the taxpayer means a person connected with another by blood or marriage.
* suffering from mental illness are in danger of being stigmatized or devalued
- viral infections, bacterial and fungal attacks are other causes of sinusitis
- withdrawal also take longer to regain emotional equilibrium following stress
+ Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Main Contents: Disability :: Human rights
* All persons are free from torture, cruel, inhuman treatment or punishment and scientific test.
+ Dream: Everyday life :: Psychology :: VOA Special English words
* There are many different theories about why people dream and what their dreams mean. Every person has different dreams. Others think that people, places, and objects in dreams are symbols for other things in the dreamer's real life. Throughout history people have tried to make sense of dreams to learn things from them, and have often used them for divination or fortune-telling. Today there are still many books and websites devoted to making sense of dreams.
+ Earth, What it is made of, What it's like outside: Geology
* The outside of the Earth is not even. The largest of these places are named plains and are very important for growing food and building great towns. Many persons live in the large plains of China and India, for example. Because of this, the Earth would have all been very flat a long time before now, but the moving plates discussed above make new high places before that is able to come about.
+ History of the Soviet Union (1985-1991), After the dissolution
* Many Russians of older generation believe that the earlier system was better. During 1990s, Russia faced many crises in political, social and economic matters. Many persons still believe that the situation still continues to be worse compared to earlier times.
+ Need: Philosophy :: Psychology
* Every person has the same basic needs for the body. Humans have boldily needs of water, food, clothing, and shelter to live. The need for water is the most important because a person will die very quickly without drinking water. In a warm place food is the next most important need. In a cold place, the need for clothes or shelter may be next most important because a person will soon die without these.
+ Sexual reassignment surgery: Surgery
* Transgender people may get one of these surgeries, a combination, or no surgeries at all. Every person is different.
+ Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Important ideas: United Nations | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Personality
* Explains thoughts and feelings, behavior, and the unconscious mind.
* Personalities are people that are just known for being on programs
- can also affect a people's culture
* Some personality correlates in authoritaranism
- traits standout as indicators of possible problems.
* Presenters are the hosts of programs. Personalities are people that are just known for being on programs. Presenter of more of a British title for the job of host
* affects ratings of Oral health-related quality of life.
* can change in a number of ways
- play a role in producing variation in performance
* changes because improper nutrition causes actual changes in one s brain chemistry.
* changes with age, just like hair color and skin texture
- gets gray and skin wrinkles
* combination of psychological traits that classifies a person.
* complex system.
* comprises the totality of individual brilliance and emotional tendencies.
* correlates of behavioral consistent individuals.
* factor in the amount of weight that individuals gain over their life span.
* great aphrodisiac, when somebody is charming or funny.
* has many dimensions and affects job performance in different ways
- to do with a person's style of life or way of being
* influences the outcome of events in a life.
* is affected by and in turn affects each person's experiences and abilities.
* is an area of knowledge that can be measured and analyzed
- attribute
- important concept in affect theory
- individuals thinking, behavior, and feelings
- comprised of traits and habits
- developed through interaction with other living creatures, primarily humans
- explained by intricacies of brain chemistry
- generally a part of the breed, and a factor in choosing one breed over another
- impossible without feelings, thinking, and emotions
- inseparable part of the self
- merely cocreation of genetics, consciousness and environment
- part of people
- probably the most important factor in conflict between workers
- reduced to the status of being a by-product of the body
- related to feelings of control
- revealed in an individual's accomplishments
- shaped by genes and by environment, particularly peers
- social convenience
- that psychological distinction
* is the characteristic way in which a person thinks, feels, and behaves
- combination of thoughts, emotions and behaviors that makes everyone unique
- core potential that determines one's success in life and career
- interactive result of the person and the situation
- last vestige of anthropomorphism
- most powerful force in the cosmos
- private world of one's inner experiences
- scientific study of how, and why, people are unique and similar to one another
- way a person expresses their uniqueness
* is traced from birth through age three
- to age three
- understood by reference to basic cognitive and affective processes
- viewed as a model of processing information
- what can be measured by a personality test
* means a man's position and mission centering on a certain greater purpose.
* name for the body-mind complex, the psychophysical formation.
* often dictates the ability to respond spontaneously.
* plays a role in everyone's job performance
- an important role that affects academic achievement
* primarily forms from birth to about age six.
* process of living a life.
* refers to the fact that the behavior of any individual shows some consistency
- ways people perceive and interpret behavior
* results from the interplay of biological and environmental factors.
* scales that ask individuals to answer a series of questions about their behavior.
* seems to play a major role in how dominant males respond to stress.
* serves as a focal point for integrating knowledge from many areas of psychology.
* set of individual differences in behavior
- talents for dealing with group life
* source of energy and causation with an intelligible structure.
* traits Personality traits in seasonal affective disorder. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Physical entity
* Every physical entity has gravitation, the property by which it attracts every other entity.
* Physical entities are surface expressions of spiritual substance.
* is an entity | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Poetry
* aligned with specific melodies and rhythm makes up the 'corpus' of Yemeni vocal music.
* also has meter.
* beautiful form of expressing feelings, and emotions.
* book of light at night.
* builds verbal skills by helping children look at communication and words in a fun, new way.
* can aid in the development of children s language.
* can be a means of artistic expression and personal discovery
- to search for truth, for the truth that can be embodied by our actions
- convey an artist's abstraction of a person, an event or a scene to another
- immortalise things and people
* can, like pottery be the affirmation of the unity of the human with the natural world.
* candle where other lights fail.
* collaborative enterprise involving the contributions of many people.
* collection of original poetry.
* comes in all shapes and forms
- shapes, sizes and styles
- out when the soul opens up out through the mind
* compression of language, and the movement in a poem is from idea to idea.
* conversation begun in ancient times about what it means to be human.
* deals with language, structure, voice and meaning - the essentials of literature.
* form of expression and one can tell a lot about a person by what they write
- writing that evokes images, emotions, and ideas and as well as tell stories
- which works towards perfection, but no poem is ever perfect
* genre
- that the students have studied during library
* goes back to the beginning of our history, and music is part of society.
* growth process, the same as in all forms of writing.
* has for a long time playeda central role in Swahili society.
* human connection that transcends pre-conceived assumptions.
* is about a writer sharing with the reader an experience or strong feelings
- all things born with wings that sing
- also about words
- an affair of sanity, of seeing things as they are
* is an art form
- of time, as music is
- practised with the terribly plastic material of human language
- awareness of what Nature is
- expansion of emotional words
- image-making power in which words are set unchangeably in order
* is an important area of concentration in literature
- part of Japanese tradition
- integral force in the metaphysical and political lives of indigenous peoples
- another form of writing that has great potential for the gifted child
- art by means of words
* is as common as flowers, as friendship, as loss, as evil, as good
- much a part of the universe as mathematics and physics
- based on the oldest oral traditions
- black blood accumulated within the erectile tissue
- both perception and the thing perceived
- breath filling the lungs, blood pulsing in the veins
- but one form of language, exressed either literally or metaphorically
- connected with love, sexual attraction and the divine
- essential to the fabric of culture - and to the fabric of our lives
- humankind's first native language
* is language organized for aesthetic purposes
- that sounds better and means more
- literary work
- literature that links the reader to the true personality of the author
- located in bookstores
* is made by dissolving halos in the ocean of sound
- with the syllables of dreams
- one form of communication that lends itself to creative thought transmission
* is one of the aspects of literature studied in the ninth grade
- most ancient and common forms of verbal expression
- noblest creations of the human mind
- person talking, whispering to another
- our basic connection between our sense of self and the cosmos
- physical, in every sense of the word
- pillow-thought after intercourse
- religion brought down to earth and it is of the essence of the Negro soul
- the anarchy of the senses making sense
* is the art of communicating ideas, impressions and feelings
- creating imaginary gardens with real toads
- fighting with appearances
- intimate speech, of real conversation
- uniting pleasure with truth, by calling imagination to the help of reason
- bill and coo of sex
- breath sharply inhaled, a catch in the throat
- capture of a picture, a song, or a flair, in a deliberate prism of words
- catalyst for the expression of the deepest human feelings
- common tongue as it appears in dreams
- darkness made light
* is the distillation of articulate animals calling to each other over a great gulf
- the poet's perception and response to the world
- establishing of being by means of the word
- expression of one's very soul
- greatest of arts
- heart expressing itself to the world
- highest form in the art of language
* is the language of intimacy
- mystics
- our inner-most thoughts and feelings put into words
* is the language of the gods
- meeting of minds and hearts
- most intense and muscial expression of language
* is the music of the heart, and out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks
- soul, and, above all, of great and feeling souls
- parent of superstition
- place where words are tamed and educated by being surprisingly placed
- saying of the unconcealdness of beings
- soul of our life
- sound of words, a column of air, rhythms in language
* is the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings recollected in tranquility
* is the voice of the fourth person singular
- fourth-person singular
- within the voice of the turtle
- working of the soul
- used as a formto communicate what one feels
- very much a part of the popular culture
- visual-music and visual music is poetry, because it is associative
* is what moths hum as they circle the flame
- the poet writes or the audience claims as poetry
- word-music, an art which paints pictures with words and sounds
- writing style
* language of the old and the young
- spoken to express one's opinions or feeling towards something
- used in a special way
* language, a language of emotions.
* mix of cadence and words, and music mix of cadence, words, melody and harmony.
* natural introduction for young children, to spoken and written language.
* place where ambivalence can live.
* powerful means to communicate the human spirit.
* precision instrument for recording man's reaction to life.
* refers to the senses.
* responsible attempt to understand the world in human terms.
* revealing of the self to the self.
* ritual of sound draped over light.
* sometimes describes a very real feeling by linking together words in an unreal way.
* source of emotion.
* stems from an oral tradition.
* system for reading.
* takes many forms and expresses many ideas.
* therapeutic outlet for emotional and physical pain.
* transfer of potency.
* universal language
- vehicle for communicating thought and feeling
* usually requires some awareness of line, rhythm, meter, and sometimes rhyme.
* uses the qualities of words, in different ways, to be artistic.
* vehicle for music, memory and history that at one time existed through oral traditions.
* vital element of any culture.
* way to use the language against itself.
+ Metaphor: Words
* Poetry includes much metaphor, usually more than prose. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Poster
* are different from books or articles in the way they convey information.
* are located in bedrooms
- demonstrations
- signs
* become events in their time, a part of societal memory.
* A 'poster' large piece of printed paper that has a picture of something. Posters are made to be shown on a wall or other flat surface. Posters may be used for advertising, education, propaganda, and decoration. They may also be copies of famous works of art.
* is an organizational way to combine music with artistic design.
Present
* antigens to lymphocytes.
* are gifts.
* are located in boxs
- parties
- trees
- weddings
- tenses
- used for giving
* is time | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Process
* All processes are ultimately nonlinear and they occur on a near continuum of time-scales.
* Many processes are important converters of food substances from one form into another
- contribute to the complexity of gene products that come from one gene
- involve the use of an organic chemical solvent
- produce clusters of entities, generated by a small set of self-organizing processes
- require hydrogen generation to provide for a continuous supply
- used in industrial, or even residential, operations generate heat
* Some processes are able to make the acid directly from hydrogen sulfide
- more prone to biogrowth than others
- reversible and others are irreversible
- sensitive to ambient temperature or other seasonal factors
- mask odors, others reduce odors.
* often repeat whenever certain conditions hold. Most computer programs are of this type
* are body parts
- cognition
- methods of doing something, and translate very easily from software
- sequences of activities that take input, add value, and create output
- similar to wires, conveying information over a finite distance
- simply the steps or actions taken to transform inputs to outputs
* are the basic building blocks of organizations
- unit of behavioural descriptions
- changing aspects of structures and relationships within an active system
- conversion of one state to another state
- elongated fiberlike extensions coming from the body of the cell
- interaction, or transfer of material between components
- manufacturing activities that convert inventory from one form to another
- means of transforming commodities from one form to another
* are the methods and organization which manager the conversion of inputs to outputs
- procedures used to produce, deliver, or provide a service
* are the things that go on within the farm
- which go on within the factory
- unit of isolation
- ways scientists investigate and communicate about the natural world
* catch word that became over-processed in the nineties.
* consistently evolve and interact with other environment factors in space and time.
* description and an interpretation of how the universe works
- of how management uses resources in delivering products or services
* evolve in the direction of increasing their level of disorder or 'entropy'.
* exist in various shapes and forms.
* function of inputs.
* interact and interleave.
* is change in the matter-energy or information of that system over time
- how and when things get done
- natural selection, distributed by migration
* is the activities that take one or more kind input and create an output
- canvass upon which the practice of planning takes form and shape
- manner by which the content is achieved
- measure of productivity as inputs are converted to outputs in the educational system
- oil that keeps the machine running smoothly
- used as means of personal and financial growth
* linear sequence of events that has a start and an end point.
* live in time.
* means a series of actions that achieves an end or result.
* occurring at mid-latitudes affect conditions in the circumpolar North.
* refers to the action of compelling a person to appear before a court
- techniques and strategies used
* sequence of changes of states in a system of states.
* series of actions or operations taken to reach an end.
* thinking also spans the gap between theory and practice. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Prolactin
* Most prolactin promotes secretion
- regulates development
- stimulates mammary glands
* Some prolactin has expression
- promotes development
- suppresses ovulation
* activates breast tissue.
* acts on the breasts in female mammals to stimulate milk production
- human breast to produce milk
* affects the menstrual cycle and milk production.
* causes mammary growth in combination with other hormones
- more milk to be produced, and also causes a wonderful feeling of well-being
- the mammary glands to produce milk after childbirth
* controls mammary gland development via direct and indirect mechanisms.
* exists in three heterogenic forms which possess varying biological activity.
- also known as luteotropic hormone
- associated with the production of breast milk
- commonly over-produced by the pituitary gland
* hormone produced by the anterior pituitary
- pituitary gland in the brain
- secreted by the brain
- that induces lactation or milk formation
* hormone that is instrumental in emotional tear production
- integrally involved in mammary gland development and lactation
- stimulates the breasts to produce milk in pregnant women
* is also important in inhibiting ovulation.
* is an agent
- important regulator of mammary gland differentiation and growth
- another hormone made in the pituitary gland
- capable of both trophic and lytic actions in rat corpora lutea
- essential to the final stages of pregnancy and birth
- gonadotropin
- inhibited, the oestrogen levels rise and fertile cycles return much sooner
- involved in the development of the mammary gland and initiation of milk secretion
- known to cause spasms and muscle contractions in humans
- made by the pituitary gland and stimulates milk production
- measured if testosterone is low or if there is loss of libido
- necessary for the start of lactation
- peptide hormones
- present in each member of the pack, male and female
- produced in the stress response of both rats and humans
- proteins
- responsible for regulating milk production while insulin regulates blood sugar levels
* is secreted into milk at levels representative of the average circulating concentration
- near the end of pregnancy and prepares the breasts for milk production
* is the hormone most frequently produced in excess by pituitary tumors
- responsible for the production of breast milk
* is the hormone that controls milk production
- helps synthesize milk
- makes milk
- produces milk
* is the hormone that stimulates milk production by the breasts
- the cells in the mother's breast to produce milk
- triggers milk production in pregnant women
- which promotes milk production
* is the hormone which stimulates milk production
- milk-making hormone
- only pituitary hormone to be under tonic inhibitory control
- pituitary hormone which causes broodiness
* matures the alveolar cells to a functional condition.
* pituitary hormone that causes breast milk production, or lacation, in mammals.
* plays a major role in mam-mary gland secretion and the maintenance of lactation.
* protein hormone secreted from the anterior pituitary gland.
* relaxes the mother and stimulates the alveoli to produce more milk.
* seems to be the primary hormonal regulator of lactogenesis and lactation in marsupials.
* stimulates additional milk production
- mitosis of cells in the breast
* stimulates the breast to produce milk during pregnancy
- production of milk in females
* stress hormone that is released episodically throughout the day.
* tells the breasts it is time to begin producing large amounts of milk. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Property
* More property is damaged in the United States by floods than other natural disasters.
* Most properties are measured using a number and a unit of measurement.
* Properties Attached to a device are a number of properties
- Naturally occurring zirconium contains five isotopes
* Properties affect activities
- areas
- coastal areas
- human activities
- permeability
- quality
* Properties are also related to ion size, with magnesium crosslinked gels weaker than calcium ones
- attributes of an object
- concepts
- features which different objects can share
- functions that set or return information about the state of an object
- owned by people
- part of culture
- possessions
- qualities that define the appearance or action of an object or a section
- related to the structure and the composition of the molecules
- special qualities or characteristics that a thing has
- tastes,temperatures, and qualities of an herb
* Properties are the attributes of a component
- characteristics of an object
- features according to which things in the world can be sorted and classified
- theft
- used to define all objects
- variables that contain values that help define the nature of the object
- describe matter
* Properties give fresh insight
* Properties have economic values
- importance
- little importance
- include appearances
- prefix is an array of strings
* Properties provide important information
- represent attributes of resources relationships between resources
* Some properties are instantiated by individuals because of the relations they bear to other things
- depend on temperature
* commodity, albeit a commodity with emotional ties.
* enslaves people.
* generally is divided equally among the children after the parents die.
* includes real and tangible and intangible personal property.
* is acquired thru trade, which is an exchange of values.
* is an attribute of a control
- institution which creates unequal social power
* is anything that can be possessed and disposed of in a legal manner
- people can use, control, or dispose of
- buildings, machines, retirement funds, savings accounts, and even ideas
- classified as either real property or personal property
- considered to be any item that has a value
- crucial to the functioning of a free society and to the rule of law
- divided into real property, and personal property
- obtained by the free gift of another person, by toil, or by theft
- something that belongs to someone
- the foundation and context of the rational relationship between man and nature
* is the right to exclude others
- use, possess, enjoy and dispose of a thing
- suicide of society
- very symbol of a person's freedom
* liens specializes in online, real-time searches of property liens.
* mapping from key to value used as resources by applications.
* means and includes real and personal property
- real property including buildings, grounds and lots
- to the preservation of human life
* owned by a spouse prior to marriage is nonmarital.
* person's greatest asset.
* refers to all assets used in governmental operations
- one's material possessions and their life chances
- the cold, hot, warm or cool nature of a drug
* represents a major proportion of the world's wealth and needs to be managed effectively.
* system of regulated relationships.
* typically forms the bulk of most people's estate.
* useful tool for promoting human happiness.
+ Measurement, Units of measurement
* Most properties are measured using a number and a unit of measurement. The unit of measurement is a standard amount. The number compares the property to that standard amount. This means a tree that is ten times as tall as a meter stick is 10 meters tall.
+ Property, Ownership: Chemistry :: Theater
* Property is something that belongs to someone. If someone buys a car, the car becomes their property. The Statue of Liberty is the property of the people of the United States.
+ Semimetal: Semimetals
* A 'semimetal' or a 'metalloid' is a chemical element. It has some properties like a metal. Some properties are like a nonmetal. It might be shiny, but brittle. It might be dull, but conducts electricity. It might be very hard, but shiny. The most common semimetal is silicon. Silicon has electrical conductivity between metals and nonmetals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Quality
* Most quality affects health.
* Qualities are intangibles, and as such can manifest themselves in any shape, size or form.
* Some quality relates to health.
* Often the time invested in a GA is not proportional the increase in quality in the final product. It can take weeks getting the article just write only to toss it up for consideration then the endless tweaking of this wording and that phasing to get it just perfect. All that for one article that, while nice and shiny and a wonderful example of great work, is not significantly more useful than say Daniel Carleton Gajdusek which took about an hour, hour and a half tops. Its not shiny. Its got errors. Quality is important, but it seems that often that quality is all or nothing.
* affects ability
- cost
* becomes concern.
* begins with people who share our core values.
* can be the difference between success and failure in the fitness industry
- exist independent of quantity
* care for all living beings shared responsibility.
* collection of powerful tools and concepts that is proven to work.
* corporate priority that affects every aspect of business.
* criteria in the selection of sites.
* critical component of telecommunications services and products.
* depends on conditions
- factors
- many factors
- several factors
* derives from a natural combination of alkali soil, western sunlight and altitude.
* drives products.
* function of the content and the texture
- repeatability, uniformity, and film properties produced by the process
* has performance.
* improves ability.
* includes quality of care, quality of services, and access to providers.
* influences reproductive success
- survival
* is also about outcomes.
* is an attribute
- intrinsic value of true professionals
- assessed by analyses
- awareness among all employees
- customer satisfaction
- degrees
- economy
- energy
* is important as quantity
- to homeowners when buying a new home or selling their existing one
- influenced by time and fashion
* is measured by comparing how well different people thrive with the care they receive
- the amount of the work used to the entire work
- conformance to requirements established by facilities management personnel
- inputs
* is more important than quantity when it comes to healthy relationships with others
- quantity, since the universe amplifies thought into circumstance
- than just an attribute of a product
- often a subjective judgment that defies quantitative measurement
* is one of the criteria that people use to assess value
- most important aspects of corporate success in today's marketplace
- primary ways that health plans are evaluated by themselves and others
- part of every employee's job
- particularly important with blood and blood products
- productivity
- quality no matter who made it or when it was made
* is seen as depending on and subordinate to quantity
- equivalent to 'control of all production processes'
* is the bedrock upon which good pharmaceutical care is built
- chemical composition of that mass
- degree of excellence that customers require when they pay for products
* is the degree to which a specific product satisfies the wants of a specific consumer
- specific product satisfies the wants of a specific customer
- specified product conforms to a design or specification
- distinguishing characteristic of interpersonal communication
- ethical principle of the good
- fundamental precept, on which the company s business processes are based
* is the hallmark of higher education
- that sets Black Mountain Weavers apart
- level of fine detail that the performer, or up-loader, chooses to send to the viewer
- life of enterprise
- life-line of the travel industry
- mantra that guides all our activities
- name of the game versus quantity
- natural outcome when small groups are responsible for every aspect of each product
- outside of an object, the inside of which is caring
- primary reason for pet owners willing to pay a higher price
- responsibility of all employees
* is the responsibility of every employee
- worker in every process
- totality of specified or implied characteristics
- unknown numerator in the value equation that drives healthcare delivery today
- whole of reality
* leads to financial success
* major factor in competitive advantage
- the question of the morality of abortion
* makes differences.
* management approach to long-term success through customer satisfaction.
* measurable attribute.
* measurement of conformance to requirements.
* moving target with different meanings to different people.
* now means the quality of Earth.
* personal responsibility.
* philosophy and a process participated in by the whole of the organization.
* plays a much more important role in dentistry than in many other businesses.
* refers to accuracy, appearance, usefulness, or effectiveness
- relevance, appropriateness to topic, coherence, clarity, and voice volume
* refers to the ability to operate within their specified design parameters
- coarseness of the picture
- color of the light emitted by a light source
- excellence of our faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and students
- extent to which the materials are clean, consistent, and contaminant-free
- level of detail displayed in an image
- overall school experience
* represents a process of continuous improvement that begins with education.
* set of value criteria that are projected into our behavior as a conscientious attitude.
* shows mix results
* standard, a goal, or a set of requirements.
* term that refers to public confidence in a product.
* total organization responsibility that depends on each individual member of the team.
* way of doing business
- life that requires all things be done right the first time
- managing
* word used so often in advertising that it sometimes becomes diluted. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Quantity
* All quantities are functions of wavelength.
* Quantities are amounts
- measured in fractions of a gram or fractions of a percentage
- change smoothly with space and time
* Some quantities have no dimensions.
* addresses how much work is produced.
* assumes importance only in the inessentials of outer appearance.
* critical part of definiteness.
* describes the amount and rate of speech, and any sense of pressure.
* is an entity
- annual usage
* is of importance as an indicator of regular activity
- only as a general indicator of regular activity
- the sacrifice for quality
- to be measured in bales, and price in dollars
* measure of the outer characteristics, such as size, physical features, weight, etc.
* refers to the proper ratio of silt fence to area protected
- relative frequency of occurrence<|endoftext|>### entity:
Relation
* Describes the type of relationship between the two individuals.
* are abstraction
- dealing
- general graph structures, the most common type being a simple doubly linked list
- narration
- objects which establish a relationship between objects
- qualities of sets of subjects
- social relations
* can also describe relationships
- take the form of trees
- describe actions, cause-effect relationships, and many more
* exist between bacterial concentrations and selected water-quality constituents
- pleasure and usefulness and between displeasure and harm or danger
* is an attribute of all categories
* use ordered tuples to represent relationships among objects.
+ Relation (mathematics): Mathematics
* In mathematics, a 'relation' is used to describe certain properties of things. It is clear, that things are either related, or they are not, there are no in-betweens. Relations are classfied into four types based on mapping of elements.
* Relations can be transitive.
* Relations can be symmetric.
* Relations can be reflexive.
Rhythm
* Some rhythms adapt in two to three days while others change only after longer periods.
* can have different patterns which can be clapped or tapped.
* are essential to every part of life
- measured against time, they are measures of time
- prosody
- smaller and faster when one is awake and slower and larger during sleep
- templates
- the heart of any musical pattern
* contain the alteration of a condition or pattern.
* have their own meanings in culture.
* is time
Security blanket
* are blankets.
* can substitute for mom during a child's routine medical exam.
Segment
* Some segment worms inhabit sediments.
* are parts
- the cavities which contain the seeds | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Shape
* All shapes are vector objects which have at least one layer for the shape
- have size
* Create and fill shapes.
* Every shape is surrounded by space.
* Some shape leaves contain sporangiums
- shapes actually make the sound louder because of the way they affect the vibrations
* Some shapes affect chemical reaction
- friction
- are geometric, such as squares, circles, triangles, rectangles, and ovals
- change in the course of time
- create vacuums
* Some shapes depend on pollination
- temperature
* Some shapes have angles of the same size and sides of different lengths
- little to do with efficient movements
- only one line of symmetry, eg isosceles triangles
* Try to have a similarity among shapes of the objects in a room.
* affect products.
* are attributes
- magazines
- part of a continuum rather than being absolute
* are particularly important in how large molecules interact with others
- predominately unisex geometrics
- usually geometric or organic and have length and width
* bears on a molecule's overall polarity.
* can also help to create balance and consistency in a composition.
* can be light or dark shapes
- rectangles, circles, or polygons
- change and the vision can move
- pulsate, flicker or explode
* characteristic of form or contour.
* corks so that they fit in the holes.
* critical parameter of the interaction between a protein and an antibody.
* define objects, attract attention, communicate ideas, and add excitement.
* defined by lines are the most readily seen aspects of a landscape.
* defining characteristic of asbestos.
* direct response to vibration and frequency but, in turn, shapes also emit vibrations.
* does affect clarity.
* fitness magazine.
* function of regional characteristics.
* have height and width
- personalities
- z order
* helps children recognize basic forms.
* is an area that is contained by an implied or visual line
- attribute of something
- associative because the observer automatically groups different shapes together
- created by a closed line, or by a solid color or value
- crucial to enzyme function
- described by common words such as streaks, bands, tongues, tubes, and spots
- determined by form and function
- mostly a function of size
- often indicative of the feeding behavior of a fish
- one of the factors that influences the properties of nanoparticles
- outline or form
- part of the language of the bowel too
* is the difference between most letters
- recognition of geometric configurations usually defined by tonal differences
- what defines which antigen shape the antibody can bind
* make noise
- up both cellular forms and bodies
* refers to either a positive or negative area.
* reflex the function of the cells.
* sensory element that art makers use.
* spheroid - spheroid stretched out sphere that is elliptical in cross section.
* start from random horizontal positions and have random orientations.
* stay close to the body, but never hug it.
* take on lives of their own, and geometry is related to everyday life.
* two-dimensional area with a recognizable boundary.
+ Anchor: Ship building :: Boats
* Shape is more important to temporary anchors, and design is very important.
+ Shape, Special shapes
* Some shapes are special. These special shapes either cannot be made in real space, or they look unusual. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Signal
* All signals are means of visually communicating a message.
* Every signal has a frequency spectrum.
* Some signals actually bounce of the earth's atmosphere and can travel thousands of miles
- change their frequency content over time
* also come down from the cerebral cortex to the inner ear, forming multiple feedback loops
- have a property called wavelength , which is inversely proportional to the frequency
* are a form of expressive communication
- limited but useful form of interprocess communication
- primitive form of interprocess communication
- an important part of railroading
- carried across a synaptic cleft by a. neurotransmitters
- electrochemical
- incitement
- simply the electric or electromagnetic encoding of data
- software generated interrupts that are sent to a process when a event happens
- transduced within cells or in between cells and thus form complex signaling networks
* can travel no faster than the velocity of light.
* is communication
* move up and down the spinal cord in bundles of sheathed axons.
* overlapping does happen from time to time.
* pass through the human body without attenuation.
* plays a key role in night vision performance.
* refers to the noise generated.
* sent between cells are necessary for large multicellular organisms to exist.
* serve as species-typical signatures in many species.
* travel along the axon by generating and propagating an action potential.
* travel through cables at a percentage of the speed of light
- the auditory nerve to the brain for processing<|endoftext|>### entity:
Smile
* are facial expression
- the external expression of an inner titter
* attract others and therefore contribute to magnetism.
* A 'smile' face made by flexing the muscles near both ends of the mouth. The neuropsychophysiological construction of the human smile. Smiles usually show happiness. A smile can be natural or fake. However, smiling can be different with animals. When smiling, the teeth shows, but sometimes animals do this when they are threatening. When chimpanzees show their teeth, it can also be a sign of fear.
* facial gesture
* is the longest word in the English language.<|endoftext|>### entity:
Solstice
* are physical events.
* is cosmic time
- science, astronomy, mythology and a platform for creative and artistic ideas
* is the Latin term for sun stands still
- product of the hard work of many people
- time of year that the sun is farthest from the equator, north or south
* mark the extreme points, when the days and nights are shortest or longest.
* marks the first day of winter, and it is the day with the least amount of daylight hours.
* means the sun stands still.
* process rather than a point in time.<|endoftext|>### entity:
Somebody
* making a noise while eating food, that is the sound of chewing food.
+ Denmark, Transport: European Union member states :: Nordic countries :: Current monarchies
* There are still many islands with no bridges to the mainland. People have to go by boat or airplane to reach these islands. Many islands will never be reached by bridges, because they are too small or too far away. If the island has too few people, bridges are often not built because it is expensive to build. Somebody has to pay for it, nothing is free.
* All these articles listed for En. Somebody just needs to grab some of it and bring it here. I have given up on simplifying articles, so I don't think it will be me.
* Somebody needs to review the and stop looking at the lead. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Someone
* can drown in a matter of seconds in mere inches of water
- skip growing up and experience life very fast and become an adult at a very young age
- think and fantasize about people of the same sex without necessarily being homosexual
* is said to have epilepsy if they have repeated seizures of primary cerebral origin.
* suffering from depression can start to behave out of character, both at home and at work
- sleep apnea can fall asleep easy enough, but has difficulty breathing
* talking participant in a conversation.
* needs to have a good talk with that anon. He has been causing many problems.
* writes a book and want to sell it. People who want to read the book have to pay the author to get copies of it. He would not want someone else to sell a stolen version of the book, and get money for the work he had done.
* DYK is kind of getting out of date. Someone needs to get it back up to speed. I am only saying this as posting 4 of my own hooks on the MP would be a bit of a bias.
+ Alkali, Strength of an Alkali: Chemistry
* Someone can find out how strong or weak an alkali is by adding universal indicator to it. Some universal indicators can be poured into alkalis and some are soaked into paper, and the paper is touched to the alkali.
+ Education, Types of education, Informal education:
* There is also informal education. For example, a parent teaches a child how to prepare a meal. Someone can also get an informal education by reading many books from a library. Informal education is when you are not studying in a school and do not use another particular learning method.
+ Fisting: Sexual acts
* Men also first other men for the challenge of taking not only the hand, but the wrist, forearm, upper arm as far as the armpit into their tracts. Some bars, clubs, and taverns teach fisting. In the bar or club, a sling is hung from the ceiling. Someone climbs into the sling either nude or in leather drag. A lot of lubricant must be used. Lubricant is usually available. Men prefer a simple 1 pound can of Crisco shortening. The instruction starts. Instructional videos and images can be viewed on the Internet.
+ Maslow's hierarchy of needs, Self-Actualization Level
* People have different things that they might want in their life that go along with this level. Some of these things could be becoming a great basketball player, becoming a master at the piano, or being a great inventor. These needs do not show themselves until all of the needs in the lower levels have been taken care of. For example, if a person is worrying about feeding themselves and needs to think about their physiological needs, then they will not be thinking about self-actualization and their life goals. Making sure they have food and a home is more important. Someone only reaches the self-actualization level once all the other levels are fulfilled.
+ Peter Grimes, Synopsis, Epilogue: Compositions by Benjamin Britten :: 20th century operas
* The opera ends with an epilogue in which the scene is the same as the beginning of the opera. Someone says that a boat has been seen sinking out to sea, but no one is interested. The people have forgotten Grimes, and continue their lives without him.
+ Quicksand, Properties: Geography
* Someone stepping in it starts to sink. Around the person dense regions of sand and sediment form and grip the person. The viscosity of the quicksand seems to increase suddenly. It is now a gel. In order to move within the quicksand, a person or object must apply sufficient pressure on the compacted sand to re-introduce enough water to liquify it.
* Someone writes a hatchet job about a company with a less than stellar reputation. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Space
* Every space is filled with light, but all at different frequencies.
* Includes space stations, isolated environments, and colonization of space.
* More space means more energy to heat and cool it.
* is no longer an issue. I had someone fix it so if its too large, you have the option to hide it.
* Plants Close Together.
* acts as a universal container in which all other substances are contained.
* also plays a role in bed size.
* appears dark or black due to absence of a medium to diffuse light.
* are dots between words
- more than passive loci of social relations
- significant in alphabetization
* can have no existence apart from the mass object which determines it
- stretch during the expansion of the universe
- structure into anything
* changes the form of expression, as does lack of space.
* configuration of four 'immaterial particles'.
* consists of fields generated in the medium
- height, depth, and breadth
- pure energy, the distortion of which engenders the created world
- three dimensions, each of which is equally important and occupies all space
- predominantly of ionized gas, known as plasma
* created by various fasciae of the neck are potential areas of infection.
* creation of the mass consciousness, just like water, air and light.
* delimiter between fields and is simply the space character.
* derives from the immanence of G-dliness.
* distance between.
* exists between particles.
* extends everywhere and contains everything.
* fabric that when twisted becomes a vortex.
* filling molecular models show the atomic sizes of the atoms of the molecule.
* finite element
* form of energy associated with matter.
* generated by communication technologies have a topological order.
* geographic location like air, land, and sea.
* geographically bounded region in two or three dimensions.
* harsh environment that affects the body in many ways.
* has a boundary which is receding at the speed of light
- an increasingly important economic role, and is integral to the networked global economy
- boundaries, time is boundless
- curves
* has no air, and temperatures reach extremes of heat and cold
- boundaries and extends endlessly in all directions
- size, shape or center
- three distinct characteristics- length, height and width
- weather too, mostly caused by the sun
* human construction.
* is all the observer's untuned-in information
- almost always a factor in length of sentences
* is also a continuum from here to there to everywhere
- sacred or spiritual reality as much as it physical one
- eternal, without any end line
- full of gas and dust
* is an attribute
- empty and airless vacuum
- environment rather than a specific discipline
- illusion used to hold existence
* is an important component in the growth of any economic structure
- resource for foxes
- infinite set of points forming a mathematical model of the universe
- instrument which can be used to obtain things
- issue in any information visualization
- architectural when the evidence of how it is made is seen and comprehended
- as valid an environment to travel in, as land or water
- being infinite, but surely it's got to end somewhere
* is black because there are very few molecules to scatter light
- with all kinds of planets
- characters
- composed of waves and matter is composed of particles
- connected to time
- constant, it is time itself that changes with time
- continuous with ventricular system of the brain
* is created by the actual overlapping of layers of bonded materials
- things vibrating at different levels
* is curved and bound up with time in a continuum
- in the vicinity of a massive object
- defined by at least four identical particles
- depicted as three-dimensional by diminishing the size of objects that are further away
- empties
- even more non-Euclidean in general relativity than in special relativity
- experienced as extended in three dimensions
- filled with energy
* is full of light
- radiation of various frequencies
- height, width, and depth
- important in both dance and basketball
- in a three dimensional form
- infinite in all directions
- infinite, having always existed and the number of atoms are also infinite
- infinites
- laid out randomly in two dimensions
- like a ocean that surrounds all mass
- limitless, and all kinds of things can fly through the sky without any obstructions
* is located in boxs
- fronts
- jars
- paragraphs
- parking lots
- space shuttles
- suitcases
- tables
- text
- universes
- locations
- measured in pixels
- mostly vacuum
- mystery and curiosity characteristic that predates human beings
- nature's way of preventing everything from being all in the same place
- nature, our environment
- nearly a vacume, with no air and no oxygen
- nothing but a system of relations devoid of metaphysical or ontological existence
* is one of the last places for humankind to explore
- most extreme environments that humans have ever entered
* is only an appearance like objects seen in dream, which are contradicted in waking
- cold in places far removed from stars
- outside the layer of air that surrounds our earth
* is part of everybody's daily lives
- forms
- musical notation
- staff
* is represented as an infinite given magnitude
- quantity
- seeded with precious metals
- segmented by pi numbers of radians
- separation, loneliness is separation, and distance is separation
- space only
- television shows
- tensional in nature as indicated by the fact that all wave motions are transverse
- the absence of energy events, physically
* is the area around or enclosed by forms
- needed by a wild animal
- of vital interests of mankind
- consciousness of bodily mobility
- geographical location of the document
- horizontal variable
- immovable limit of the surrounding body with respect to the body surrounded
- normal speed of time
- only goal that collectively unite the entire world to proceed into the future
- personal area surrounding individuals and objects
- place from which no meaningful politics can be conceived
- primary phenomena and matter is derived from it as a secondary result
- realm in which things exist, time is the realm in which things change
- set of all points
- setting, the connections and flows, between and among places
* is used for filling
- items
- storage
- vast, and time is near eternal when measured on human time scales
* is very big, and comets are very small in contrast to the streams of debris they leave behind
- cold, much colder than the freezing point of champaign
* is what all creatures, physical and spiritual operate in
- defines the relationships between people
- happens from moment to moment
- stops everything from happening in the same place
* is where qi dwells
- the human race is going to get it's minerals from in the next millenium
* matter of psychological perception as much as it is of physical cubic feet.
* matterenergy field and therefore contains matter.
* mesh and time as individual time steps, like the frames in a motion picture.
* metaphor for the collective psyche.
* mode of perception by the individualized observer.
* move forward and recede as objects contain their own mass.
* multidimensional infinity.
* never changes, but the weather in space changes all the time.
* pervades everything and is without form.
* physical simulation that only has a conceptual reference to the original.
* plants one to two feet apart, as they can grow four feet tall.
* pulses with life and energy, even within one atom of it.
* radiation-dominated environment.
* reality of the material world.
* refers to flight beyond the atmosphere
- the territory an opponent occupies on the chessboard
* replaces time.
* rudiment of geometry, as well as of measurement and of topology.
* shuttles carry astronauts into outer space
- travels from Earth into outer space They are sent into space from a launch pad
* simply has three dimensions which are filled with material things.
* three-dimensional continuum.
* timing machine whose parts are called points.
* vacuum , or nearly so
- and there is no gravity in a vacuum
* vacuum, and so is the interior of any asteroid cave.
* visible or invisible barrier that separates antagonists or protects one's own forces.
* volume of emptiness that encompasses everything.
+ Parking lot: Road transport :: Traffic
* Lines are put on paved lots to create the outlines of parking spaces. People leave their cars in these spaces while they go shopping, go to work, or do errands. Some spaces are set aside for disabled drivers or disabled passengers. These spaces are clearly marked. A disabled driver needs a special badge or insignia issued by the government to use these spaces. Disabled spaces are usually close to the front of a lot. Drivers who are not disabled can be fined or their cars towed if they use these spaces.
+ Space observatory
* Space observatories and their wavelength working ranges. Flight Missions Information Graphical Interface. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Spirit
* All spirits are in adult form
- on the earth and many in our body
* Many spirits crave what they enjoyed on earth -such as food or drink
- enjoy the smell and taste of ritually offered food and drink
* Some spirits are benevolent, while others are malevolent
- higher in congeners than others
- protective and beneficial, others are potentially harmful
- have trouble spelling words or creating sentences
- like to lie
- remain at or near the site of their death, especially if it was sudden and unexpected
* also love water - as they are part of the collective unconscious which is the flow of water
- supply diagnoses during the darkness of dream-time
* are also, in many cases often unaware of invading somebody's aura
- beings from outside of the world
- even slower to metabolise than wine and beer
- four dimensional creatures and therefore are see-through and can pass through walls
- individual supernatural beings with their own recognizable traits
- intelligent, self-existent, organized matter and are governed by eternal laws
* are the heart and soul of a bar
- intelligent Beings of creation
* can also refer to the supernatural world of ghosts
- attach themselves to things
* can be benevolent or malevolent
- mischievous, protecting or bringing harm to men, beasts, and crops
- get into dreams to teach, to deceive, to scare, to tempt people
- move objects, ring doorbells, open or close doors, and manifest a physical appearance
- only touch, In a world all of their own
- take human form as well as non human form
- tap into some places or people to obtain fatigue quickly
- illnesses by entering the body through the patient's food
* do nothing except animate the body to which they are attached.
* evolves through form and out of form.
* exist and they play important roles both in individual lives and in human society.
* go about at nights, in the daytime they turn into dew and rest in cupped leaves.
* guides channel healing energies through the medium into the body of the patient.
* increase mucus production.
* infuses matter and from their union, life-forms come into being.
* is alcoholic drinks
- artificial satellites
- atmospheres
- capable of haunt houses
- characters
- liquids
* is located in bars
- graveyards
- haunted houses
- heaven
- mediums
- mobs
* is used for breaking
- drinking
- haunting houses
- religion
- special occasions
* know their identity by undergoing successive incarnations.
* live insphered In regions mild, of calm and serene air.
* lose their power when called by their true names.
* often appear in mist-like forms
- on film as globules
* reincarnate as many times as becomes necessary in order to achieve their own perfection.
* sometimes communicate through rapping
- leave the bodies of their host even while they are alive
* stem from the invisible realms.
+ Shot glass: Containers :: Alcoholic drink
* A 'shot glass' is a small cup that people use to drink alcoholic drinks with. Spirits are usually drunk out of shot glasses. A person usually swallows everything in the glass at once. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
State
* All States allow a person to make decisions concerning their health care.
* All States have a land-grant college that offers agricultural science degrees
- which offers agricultural science degrees
- at least one land-grant college which offers agricultural science degrees
- beautiful white sandy beaches
- laws allowing abused persons to obtain orders of protection in a civil proceeding
* All states are mental states
- varieties of a single organizational form, the sovereign state
* All states have a banking department regulating the formation, operation, and location of banks
- college that offers agricultural degrees
- commissioner of insurance
- governmental agency responsible for that state s non-migratory wildlife
- public utilities commission, which regulate telcos
- adoption laws allowing the adopting parents to pay for medical, hospital, etc
- age at marriage laws
- an excise tax on cigarettes
- at least one provider of early abortion services
- child labor laws and compulsory school attendance laws
- different laws, but there problem with some laws on abortion
* All states have general statutes which limit the practice of law to licensed attorneys
- trial courts
- immunization mandates for children entering school
* All states have laws and rules regarding the operation of snowmobiles
- governing the distribution of obscene materials
- permitting the termination of parental rights of parents who are incarcerated
- prohibiting domestic violence
- regulating the practice of social work
- restricting distribution of pornographic materials by adults to children
- that address traffic safety
* All states have laws that prohibit activities that potentially harm citizens
- cruelty to horses and other animals
- require vaccination against rabies to protect both pets and their owners
- sustain the rights of employees with disabilities
- mandatory child restraint laws
- parental child abuse and neglect laws
- preschool programs for children with disabilities
- prohibitions against operating a vehicle under the influence of alcohol or drugs
- rules and regulations, made by state administrative agencies
- rural populations
- slayer laws that prohibit killers from inheriting from their victims
- some laws that protect horses
- specific statutes and regulations governing the practice of medicine and optometry
* All states have statutes on abuse
- or common law defining what constitutes informed consent
- their own constitution
- workers' compensation laws
- now have laws making it illegal to sell or distribute tobacco to minors
* All states permit burial of bodies, with a proper death certificate, on private land
- unmarried individuals to adopt through both private-placement and agency adoption
* All states prohibit child pornography
- the sale of tobacco products to minors
- provide low or no cost health insurance to children who are uninsured
- require teachers in public schools to have at least a bachelor's degree
- shift their energy in the same way
* Every State has a constitutional amendment or a statute which protects victims' rights
- laws to help families when a wrongful death occurs
* Every state also criminalizes deliberate acts that result in death or serious threat to life
- conducts DNA tests on convicted sex offenders, and most test convicted murderers
* Every state has a child labor law, usually enforced by a state labor department
- commission that regulates the utility industry, including telecommunications
- department of insurance that regulates insurers and assists consumers
- developmental disabilities council
* Every state has a different criminal code of laws
- set of laws
- geological survey that produces geologic maps
- law requiring children to be buckled up or in a child safety seat
- newborn screening program
- program to provide free or low-cost health insurance for kids
- public health or education agency serving children with special needs
- regulatory agency responsible for overseeing intrastate telecommunications
- right to protect official secrets
- sex offender registry
* Every state has a state archives which holds the official records of the state government
- coordinator for the education of homeless children and youth
- society or association of CPAs
- system both for removing and restoring children from a parent's custody
- teen pregnancy prevention program
* Every state has an agency for the aging
- responsible for licensing and disciplining lawyers
- that helps people with disabilities find jobs
* Every state has at least one district court, and highly populated states have more
- federal district court, and many states have several
- child support guidelines which determine the amount of child support to be paid
- different laws and regulations concerning emissions and aftermarket modifications
* Every state has different laws on the interstate shipment of alcoholic beverages
- wills
- oral sedation dentistry regulations
- rules regarding how the electors vote
- general consumer protection laws that prevent deceptive trade practices
- geographic characteristics that separate it from all other states
* Every state has laws addressing elder abuse
- dealing with child neglect and abandonment
- mandating infant car seat use and immunizations
- providing for some kind of educational services for children with disabilities
- regarding condominiums, also known as vertical subdivisions
* Every state has laws that prohibit unfair, discriminatory, or deceptive insurance practices
- require or encourage automobile liability insurance coverage
- medical practices acts which define what constitutes the practice of medicine
- numerous wildlife laws and regulations that deal directly with trapping
- regional differences that influence the governance of higher education
- some kind of law regarding the accounting procedures of licensed property managers
- workers compensation laws in one form or other
- involved in The War for Southern Independence has least one national cemetery
- is the dictatorship of a ruling class, even the most democratic
- makes it a crime to engage in certain cruel acts toward animals
* Every state now screens newborns for certain birth defects
- genetic diseases
- owns institutions of higher education
- property state
* Many States already have statutes or case law reflecting State policy toward same-sex marriage
- also have strict prohibitions against the introduction of non-native wildlife
* Many States have field study centres that conduct marine biodiversity programs
- legislation which requires schools to have a rehabilitation program in force
- towns with the same names
* Many States now recognize the medical and therapeutic value of acupuncture
- require the removal of excess chlorine before discharge to surface waters
- provide for the compulsory retirement of judges upon reaching a certain age
- regulate additional air toxic air pollutants
* Many states allow adult adoptions
- dental technicians as well as veterinarians to float teeth
- dress codes unless they are unreasonable or discriminatory
- hunting with handguns during the regular firearm seasons
- the restricted use of grass carp for aquatic weed control
* Many states also allow city and county obscenity laws
- for the testing of blood, breath or urine for the presence of drugs
- the adoption of adults
- build, own, and operate their own airports
- charge an annual tax on tangible personal property
- fund pre-kindergarten child care from general revenues
- give out federally funded scholarships and grants
* Many states also have a common law right of privacy
- consumer protection agencies and special offices to regulate charities
- county consumer protection offices
- depository libraries
* Many states also have laws or regulations that promote alternatives
- providing for state court administered receiverships
- that protect the physically challenged
- monthly income caps
- pollution prevention offices with information available to the public
- programs and funding sources for trail construction and maintenance
- statutes or regulations prohibiting tampering in general
- student loan programs for residents attending school in another state
* Many states also have their own arbitration statutes
- laws governing collections
- rules governing fluorescent lamps
* Many states also impose a personal income tax
- an estate tax
- look at wages and industry output
* Many states also maintain funds to repay crime victims
- their own state defense forces
- permit concealed carry at school sporting events, concerts, and other activities
- place restrictions on name changes by convicted felons, particularly sex offenders
- produce seedlings
- regulate the practice of occupational therapy
- require dietitians to be licensed in order to practice within that state
- restrict forfeiting a person's primary car
- appear to have some statute governing the financial privacy of individuals
* Many states are concerned about cell phones in particular
- donor states to the highway system
- incredibly hot and humid in the summer months
- ban pet primates, and others require permits
- charge a corporate income tax
- collect data on mercury levels in fish from local waters
- compensate victims for injuries sustained during a crime
- consider fluorescent lamps to be hazardous waste
- continue to mistreat their own citizens
* Many states currently contract with non-profit agencies to administer child care subsidies
- have laws in place which address electronic monitoring in the workplace
- don t have a centralized location for issuing driver s licenses
- emphasize the prevention of unintended pregnancy, particularly among teenagers
- encourage employers to accommodate the needs of breastfeeding mothers
- even have different mechanisms for choosing Democratic and Republican delegates
- get some of the electricity from renewables
- grant some level of legal immunity for reporting elder abuse
- have Indian education associations or groups addressing specific issues
* Many states have a ban on phosphates in detergents
- fairly comprehensive list of rights for victims of serious juvenile offenses
- separate public health department for each county
- state income tax
- age discrimination employment laws as well
- anti-sodomy laws still on the books
- bad faith laws that are effective against insurance company malfeasance
- both criminal and civil anti-stalking laws
- commissions or agencies just for serving deaf and hard of hearing people
- compulsory attendance laws that begin at age six
- concerns about the levels of mercury in fish and other animals
- consumer protection agencies and special offices that regulate charities
- criminal statutes outlawing theft of trade secrets
* Many states have different procedures for domestic violence and civil harassment
- waste regulations
- employment laws covering either veterans or disabled veterans
- equal employment opportunity laws that protect against pregnancy discrimination
- exceptions for corporal punishment written into their child abuse laws
- few environmental standards for logging
- free-market oriented think tanks
- hundreds of public and private programs and facilities for delinquent kids
- large wreath-making industries
* Many states have laws about children having to sit in safety seats or wear seat belts
- addressing whistle-blower protection
* Many states have laws against employment discrimination and sexual harassment
- unsolicited commercial email unless consumers agree to opt-in
- and labor codes pertaining to companies with just one employee
- applying to people who have a history of passing out
- dealing specifically with identity theft
* Many states have laws governing hearing aid sales
- legal relationships between distributors and their suppliers
- the transportation of firearms
- helping persons with disabilities, the homeless and others to vote
- on reptiles
* Many states have laws regarding the minimum age for piercing minors with parental consent
- safety of children in automobiles
* Many states have laws regulating how a repair shop operates, spelling out each party's obligations
- the possession, sale, and distribution of nitrous oxide
- related to equine activites
- requiring that consumer statutes be written in plain language
- restricting public profanity , loud noise in public , and disorderly conduct
* Many states have laws setting standards for child labor and teen drivers
- for child labor in agriculture
- strictly regulating credit repair companies
* Many states have laws that apply to all businesses in the state, regardless of size
- hold parents responsible for the supervision of their children
- identify state ownership of collections recovered from state lands
- protect a spouse from being disinherited
* Many states have laws that require children to wear bike helmets
- regular school fire drills
- the reporting of abuse and neglect
- state, that explain the condition of when a person is deceased
* Many states have laws to prevent someone from obtaining someone's home address
- protect new car buyers
- logical ethnic ties
- lower incarceration rates
- more than one district based upon population
- multiple levels of competition, like sports do
- name indexes to the federal censuses of their state
- native plant societies
- no enforced registration of births, deaths, pauperism, vice, insanity, or crime
- noxious weed laws
- official state anthems, birds, flowers, and even official state cookies
- parental consent or notification laws
- places that are licensed to provide care for orphaned animals
* Many states have programs designed to assist victims of crime
- for the early detection of deafness in kids
- that provide pharmaceuticals to the poor and the elderly
* Many states have programs to fund networking in schools
- help people get hearing aids
- provisions in their constitution that make it more difficult to raise taxes
- quarantines to prevent cultivation of such species
- regulations regarding minimum age
- restrictions on certain kinds of plants
- rules requiring that warning signs be conspicuously posted
- scoliosis screening programs in schools
- seller disclosure laws
- some form of drug-free workplace laws
- special programs and benefits for veterans with service-connected disabilities
- spring turkey hunts
* Many states have state policy councils that work specifically on state issues
- tax credits for families adopting children from the public adoption agencies
* Many states have statutes requiring HMOs to provide medical care to their members
- that make it a crime to blacklist a former employee
- statutory prohibitions against the unlawful practice of law
- stringent health standards regarding exported and imported fish
* Many states have their own acupuncture laws
- agencies that enforce state discrimination labor laws
- continuing legal education institutes
- equal credit opportunity laws
- laws against rollbacks, or charge offenders with fraud
- pygmy goat clubs
- sex-discrimination laws and relief agencies
* Many states have their own state bureaus of investigation and their own investigators
- specific law
- statutes which protect wetlands
- tax limitation laws
- trade offices in overseas markets
- voter registration forms online
- wage claim laws requiring employers to pay workers their wages in a timely fashion
- websites on the Internet where they post ozone forecasts
- zero-tolerance laws
* Many states hold annual archaeology weeks and festivals
- job fairs
- issue their own duck stamps
- list the loon on their endangered species list
* Many states maintain a database of registered sex offenders available on the Internet
- indexes of past marriages
- registries of diseases such as cancer and birth defects
- veterans homes for veterans
- make it illegal for injecting drug users to possess needles
- mandate book covers to keep textbooks clean and eligible for resale
* Many states now have casino gambling
- infant-restraint laws
- programs to insure all children
- seat belt laws
- offer tax-deferred savings programs for people funding a child's education
* Many states now require companies to have a corporate sexual-harassment policy
- that the blood levels of lead in infants be determined and recorded
- the use of voting machines in all elections, including primary elections
- observe Arbor Day on different days according to their best tree-planting times
- offer savings plans for families wanting to save for the future expenses of a child
- permit scooters to use bicycle lanes
- place restrictions on the ownership of real property by foreign nationals
- post names, pictures and addresses
- prefer to keep only certain species, namely shark and barracuda
- presume an equal division of all marital property, including retirement rights
- prohibit sportsmen from selling wild fish and fish parts
* Many states prohibit the culture of certain species
- dissemination of confidential private medical information as well
- relocation of species with a high potential to transmit the rabies virus
- tattooing of minors
- using snowmobiles on public roads
- promote the use of golden shiners or threadfin shad as bass forage
- prosecute people attempting to buy firearms under their own gun laws
* Many states recognize how grandparents and relatives have provided a safety net for families
- the importance of breastfeeding and are passing laws to protect working moms
* Many states regulate the importation of living marine organisms
- transportation of certain plants
- used antifreeze as a hazardous waste
- relocate their bears
- report difficulty keeping people working in the child care field due to low wages
* Many states require a provider to report each abortion that is performed
- as part of their newborn screen a test called a hemoglobin electrophoresis
- bike lights for riding at night
- bounty hunters to register with local law enforcement prior to making an arrest
* Many states require children to wear seat belts even in the back seats
- under a specified age to wear a proper sized life jacket while boating
- dietitians and nutritionists to be licensed
- drivers to have automobile insurance
- helmets for riders under a given age
- hunters to be a certified hunter safety class graduate before they can hunt
- parental consent for the marriage of younger individuals
- permission from parents to test minors
- permits to be owned by wolves
- supermarkets to mark the unit price on the shelves or the price tags
* Many states require teachers to have a master's degree in education
- obtain a master s degree in education
* Many states require that a relative or guardian live in the state with the person with disabilities
- child care providers have background and criminal history checks
- their governments to practice balanced budget policy
- resort to hunting to control their burgeoning deer populations
- say that religious schools can only grant religious degrees
- sell their motor vehicle registration records to mailing list companies
- set income limits far below the poverty level
- specifically identify a sole proprietorship as an entity owned by ONE person
- still use salt on their roads to improve traction
- stratify by mother's race or ethnicity as well
- structure their excise taxes on alcohol content and quantity
- track no one once they leave welfare
- trying to meet litter reduction goals often conduct annual roadside litter surveys
* Many states use grand juries to ensure local jails are being maintained properly
- lethal injection
- permanent weigh stations or ports of entry to regulate trucking
- proficiency testing as a way to assess children and evaluate teachers
- telephone hotlines to help catch public assistance cheaters
* More states pass laws restricting smoking in public places.
* Most States have a Society
- fair and there are hundreds of county fairs
- unicameral legislature
- parole boards with jurisdiction over persons with sentences of a year or more
- penal provisions which are applicable to cases of torture or similar practices
- tenure laws
* Most States require health certificates indicating workers are free from communicable diseases
- youth to undergo supervision and treatment after release from an institution
* Most states actively recruit children into hunting, through special youth hunts
- affect activity patterns
* Most states allow for the taking of foxes to protect private property
- their law enforcement officers to conduct sobriety checkpoints
- already prohibit genetic discrimination by health insurers, employers, or both
* Most states also have a bibliography of newspapers
- commission, council, or committee that addresses disability issues
- felony murder statute
- antitrust laws closely parallelling the federal antitrust laws
- armed forces , civil service , law and police
* Most states also have laws on an age of consent
- requiring employers to give employees time off for military duties
- professional organizations of social workers
- sexual harassment laws
- smaller, specialized courts that hear particular types of cases
- specific laws regarding employment credit checks
- statutes which prohibit false and misleading advertising
- their own noxious weed laws
- impose their own estate tax
- maintain some system for registration and protection of trademarks
- regulate occupational therapy practice
* Most states also regulate the practice of occupational therapy practitioners
- require dogs and cats to have a rabies tag on their collars
* Most states also test for disorders of hemoglobin, including sickle cell disease
- newborns for galactosemia
- appear to bar convicted felons from possessing guns
- appoint all of their electors based on who gained the most votes in a state
* Most states are Common Law States
- caused by water intake
- assess kin differently than non-kin foster parents
- ban the baiting of deer and elk and other big game for the same reason
- break their crimes into two major groups-felonies and misdemeanors
- can and do prosecute hate crimes
- carry laws that force therapists to report abuse to local officials
- change to Daylight Saving Time during the summer months
* Most states consider a couple to be married when the ceremony ends
- inheritances the property of the heir
- it a crime to assist another person to commit suicide
- currently have some type of law allowing court-ordered visitations for grandparents
* Most states define a gun as anything that fires a projectile
- an emancipated minor as a minor who has the power and capacity of an adult
- marriage as a civil contract between a man and woman to become husband and wife
* Most states depend on environmental conditions
- divide the crime of murder into first and second degrees
* Most states do have organizations that provide some free legal services for poor people
- their own anti-discrimination laws and agencies
- employ wildlife statisticians
* Most states grow plants
- tiny sea plants
* Most states have a central location where personal property liens are recorded
- department of conservation or tourism
- governmental agency specifically devoted to regulating the business of insurance
- licensing board that regulates the funeral industry
- linked infant birth and death database to help track infant mortality
- list of legislators by county represented
- local planning organization which assists the elderly with minor home repairs
- major history museum
- non-judicial system to carry out a foreclosure
- preponderance of doctors on their medical boards
- regulatory agency that licenses, or otherwise regulates, landfills
- rigid formula for calculating child support
- state historical society and a state archives
* Most states have a statewide criminal database where records can be searched for just one low fee
- or regional fair association
- three-tiered court system
- travel and accommodation scheme
- two-tier trial court system
- unit that administers chronic disease activities
- way of counting students for dispensing aid to school districts
- website that shows their laws on the child support subject
- wildlife management division responsible for education and enforcement of laws
- additional laws regarding the use of weapons in the commission of crimes
- agencies that collect healthcare data
- agreements called interstate compacts for criminal and traffic offenses
* Most states have an estate tax, too
- office responsible for vital statistics
- organization that offers business assistance to small businesses
- antitrust laws, and so does the federal government
* Most states have at least one kind of garter snake
- national forest
- bicameral legislatures, but one state already has a unicameral legislature
- both criminal and civil domestic violence laws
- brain injury associations
- brand laws
- business or trade libel laws
- certain regulations for persons who operate family daycares from their home
- county government
- death penalties
- drug laws that mirror the federal act
- energy wind power
- financial responsibility or compulsory insurance laws
- guaranty funds to help pay the claims of financially impaired insurance companies
- guidelines or laws specifying the appropriate treatments for intractable pain
- gun control laws that specify who can buy or use a gun, particularly a handgun
- hospitality taxes which include hotels and car rentals
- housing finance departments that are aimed at increasing homeownership rates
- large and small school divisions
* Most states have laws against certain colors, such as red and blue
- releasing confidential information without permission
- completely pre-empting any local regulation of firearms
- concerning embalming, cremation and so on
- covering trusts and trustees
- establishing presumptive levels of intoxication
- governing non-compete agreements
* Most states have laws governing the abandonment of animals by the owner
- conduct of fiduciaries
- what is to be done with property that has been abandoned
- mandating rabies vaccinations for both dogs and cats
- permitting a certain number of excused absences for religious holidays
* Most states have laws protecting children against inadvertently being disinherited
- patients in an emergency
- the clinician-patient relationship
- threatened and endangered species within their borders
- regarding children being left unattended by an adult
* Most states have laws requiring that children use safety restraints
- insurance companies pay claims within a certain time period
* Most states have laws that allow offenses by young wrongdoers to be erased from their records
- deal with disposing of claims against a dissolving or dissolved business
- parallel the federal lottery laws
- protect people who lease their homes
* Most states have laws that provide for a share of estate property to go to such children
- for a share of the estate to go to such children
- for a three-day right of recession
- set reassessment at certain time intervals
- specify minimum cartridge specifications for white- tail hunting
- local branches or chapters of national organizations
* Most states have mandatory child abuse reporting laws
- safety seat and seatbelt laws
- mass
- maximum ages up to which a minor can be in a juvenile facility
- more than one court
- multiple unions representing different members in different jurisdictions
- no internal monitoring to assess the quality of public psychiatric services
- numerous offices and organizations that serve deaf and hard of hearing people
- one or two divisions
- organizations committed to helping parents who home school their children
- parks
- pins in the shape of their state
- press associations that publish annual directories of newspapers
- professional organizations for teachers of mathematics at all levels
- programs to assist people who have print handicaps
- public records laws requiring that the destruction of public records be documented
- recycling programs to encourage proper disposal
- rules intended to foster responsible parental behavior
- rural populations that are difficult to reach
* Most states have sales and property taxes in some form
- seat belt laws that require pickup truck occupants to buckle up
* Most states have separate public school systems in each city and county
- statutes governing child custody and domestic violence
- several secies of freshwater turtles
- shapes
* Most states have similar laws governing the practice of medicine
- organizations devoted to advocating for children's rights
- regulations regarding the noise level of a watercraft
- some form of citizen initiative
* Most states have some sort of victims rights law
- wildlife advocacy group
- type of domestic violence statute
* Most states have special education programs for the disabled
- seatbelt laws for minors and require child seats for young children
- statutes for cooperatives
* Most states have specific laws regarding newborn screening
- statutes preventing assisted suicide of any kind
- standards for noise levels from industrial facilities
- state statutes requiring participation by state and local agencies
* Most states have statutes and regulations governing licensure to practice medicine
- establishing who the presumed father of a child is in certain situations
- recognizing living wills
* Most states have statutes that accord protection in the form of immunity and confidentiality
- allow grandparents to ask the court to compel visitation
- govern the disposition of security deposits for rental property
- which limit the liability of school districts in negligence actions
* Most states have strict laws requiring proper safety vehicle restraints for children
- patient confidentiality laws
- requirements regulating the growth and processing of medical marijuana
- surfaces
- tariffs which heavily discriminate against marijuana grown outside their state
- their own laws regarding marijuana and physicians
* Most states have their own venture capital finance firms that invest in high risk businesses
- capital finance terms that invest in high risk businesses
- vehicle codes posted on the Internet
- trained law enforcement officials
- two or more teacher associations
* Most states impose an inheritance tax
- corporate income taxes on the net income of telecommunications providers
- sales or excise taxes on sales of telecommunications services
- involve the exploitation of a majority by a minority
- keep day-care records at the county level
- lack the capacity to provide quality child care to large numbers of infants
- limit reporting to crashes which occur on public roads
- make the dog owner responsible for all bites, even if the dog never bit anyone before
* Most states now have privacy protection legislation
- hold parents responsible for some of the mindless damage their kids cause
- spend more on prisons than on universities
* Most states occur at low temperature
* Most states offer health insurance to qualified persons who are indigent
- services to the elderly who are neglectful of their own care
- pay benefits for the employee's lifetime in cases of permanent total disability
* Most states permit consumers to band together to buy electricity on their own
- one person to grant the power to make health care decisions to another
- produce their own milk, eggs, fruits, vegetables, and grains
* Most states prohibit animals on buses, and recent rules now prohibit animals on trains
- discrimination based on marital status
- disposal of liquids in landfills
- employers from withholding a person's salary for disciplinary reasons
- employment discrimination on the same basis as federal law
* Most states prohibit the marriage of first cousins
- use of fireworks by individuals
- protect the legal rights of the biological father in any adoption procedure
- reduce emissions
- register pesticides on an annual basis
* Most states regulate electricity rates
- pharmacy technicians in some way
- rely on sales taxes for substantial portions of their budgets
* Most states require alcoholic beverages to be sold only through state-licensed wholesalers
- all employers to carry workers compensation insurance
* Most states require car owners to purchase and maintain automobile insurance
- seats for children under four years old
- charities to be registered or licensed by the state
- children to be vaccinated before starting school
- companies to purchase workers' compensation insurance for their employees
- dietitians and nutritionists to be licensed in order to practice
- every driver to carry automobile liability insurance
- eye drops for all newborns to prevent such blindness
- health care organizations to conduct criminal background checks on employees
- motorcyclists to wear helmets
- nonphysician practitioners to be supervised by physicians
- passengers, including children, to wear a safety belt while in a car
* Most states require public school counselors to have both counseling and teaching certificates
- principals to be licensed as school administrators
* Most states require that bites to humans be reported to the local health department
- convicted sex offenders register in the county where they reside
- every registered vehicle carry some sort of auto insurance
- ferrets receive a regular rabies vaccination
- persons have reached the age of majority
- set state minimum wages at the federal level or higher
- share gas tax revenues with local taxpayers
- test all newborn babies for sickle cell disease
* Most states use a three-factor formula which taxes sales, property and payroll
- electronic databases to track the thousands of waterbodies within their boundaries
* Some States also have extensive firefighter training and certification programs
- training programs
- low cost dental and eye care schemes for the aged
- provide insurance for very small groups or the self-employed
- ban the use of detergents containing high amounts of phosphates
- classify parents with other relatives
* Some States have a methadone registry that also can provide information on heroin addicts
- cities with identical names
- relatively manageable prison population
- search and consent procedures called confidential intermediary systems
- separate agencies for individuals who are blind and visually impaired
- solid waste bans in place for all mercury-containing devices
* Some States have special juvenile courts that are separate from adult courts
- training academies
- operate daylight saving time during the Australian summer
- register buses with trucks or automobiles
* Some States require certification of caretakers who euthanize animals
- massage therapists to pass a national certification exam
* Some state haves strict rules for the keeping, housing and maintenance of captive wild animals
- licensing laws focus on physical or medical conditions
- states actually build infrastructures around attracting certain industries
* Some states actually have a law which requires the insurance companies to pay for it
- regulations that outlaw having a ferret as a pet
- to import sand to make concrete
- prohibit notaries from notarizing for their family members
- advise anglers to limit their consumption of eels from contaminated waters
- affect surfaces
* Some states allow all registered voters to vote in primaries regardless of their affiliation
- drivers to keep any deer that they hit and kill with their car
- first cousins to marry
- local communities to tax real property
- massage therapists to treat animals
- misdemeanor assault convictions for yelling at someone
- nurse-midwives to deliver children at the parents' home or at a birthing center
- one to purchase needles without a prescription
- people with moderate low vision to drive when using telescopic devices
- police to stop vehicles solely for belt law violations
- relatives of murder victims to watch executions on closed-circuit television
- trout fishing year-round
- trusts only for dogs and cats
- already limit jet skis to certain parts of rivers and lakes
* Some states also allow state tax credits for adopting families
- are more active in overseeing health plans than others
- boast a coat of arms
- certify laboratories for drug testing
- exclude domestic workers, farm workers, and independent contractors
- have civil rights laws prohibiting discriminatory practices
* Some states also have laws against inhaling nitrous for intoxication purposes
- governing conduct of research with animals
- regarding the sending of unsolicited commercial email
- that provide protection from discrimination in housing
- particular interests in certain kinds of property
- telephone numbers for information
- their own death and inheritance taxes
- whistleblowing statues
- impose various taxes that effect estates or inheritances
- levy taxes on business property and inventory
* Some states also prohibit home-based businesses from making food, drink or clothing
- the production of food, drink, and clothing in a person's home
- tax the sale of services
* Some states are better at protecting groundwater than others
- caused by heat
- community property states
- democracies , ruled by the people, who vote on what to do
- even more dependent on coal for electricity generation
- more prone to victimization by tornadoes and hurricanes than others
- assess a personal property tax on automobiles and other valuable property
- attempt to classify land according to some measure of mineral resource potential
* Some states ban abortion in public facilities
- alcohol and a permit is needed to possess, use or carry it
- teens from driving at night until they become more experienced behind the wheel
- the feeding of garbage to livestock slaughtered for food
- base future prison capacity needs on the children's literacy rate
- bind their electors to vote for the candidate they pledged to vote for
* Some states can have values
- raise taxes without even raising rates
* Some states consider an adopted child to be a lineal descendant
- employee handbooks the equivalent of employment contracts
- create physical infrastructures
* Some states define corrosivity as being a solid, as well as an aqueous or liquid property
- the monetary value of a pet for litigation or insurance purposes
* Some states do allow patients to use marijuana to alleviate the pain of their illnesses
- the use of non-school bus vehicles to transport students
- consider latex paint a hazardous waste
* Some states do have age restrictions
- state registrations of certain insecticides
- no allow chemicals to be used on wildlife
- prohibit the mutilation of cadavers, though
- regulate the transport of cremated remains
- require reporting of cases of poisoning by lead and pesticides
- don t allow ferrets to be kept as pets
* Some states even conduct war against parts of their own civilian population
- contract with private schools to serve neglected and abused children
- expel teens from school, deny drivers' licenses, impose fines and even jail youths
- explicitly prohibit the use of commercial brand names in textbooks
- export the produce of other states
- forbid merchants to record credit or charge card account numbers
- get more than half of their revenues from sales taxes
- give an income tax credit for food
* Some states have a hunting season for game birds such as pheasant, ducks and quail
- land board consisting of elected officials such as the governor and treasurer
- monopoly on hard liquor sales
- much higher exposure to uninsured motorist than other states
- nonpartisan redistricting system
- separate rehabilitation agency for the blind and visually impaired
- single LATA, others have several
- website or make their e-mail addresses accessible for information inquiries
- well-oiled system of searching for and neutralising terrorists
- additional restrictions on the killing of blackbirds
* Some states have an alarming rate of dogs that are in rescue
- individual inheritance tax
- bicycle helmet legislation requiring helmets to be worn
- border inspections off all animals, some only do spot checks
- breeds
- close corporation statutes
* Some states have criminal penalties for anyone who violates the surrogate parent law
- counterfeiting marks
- drought
- general statutes of limitation that can be applied to divorce actions
- high college continuation rates, but low high school graduation rates
- home improvement laws that specify the amount of deposit and payment schedule
- import regulations for live fish based on disease status
- incentive programs that are tied to tuition and financial aid
- just one marathon a year
- land trusts, while others are actually purchasing parks
- law marriages
* Some states have laws against the use of snow chains
- use of studded snow tires
- giving extra protection to used car buyers
- or constitutions granting people in institutions a right to treatment
* Some states have laws prohibiting discrimination against people who have a criminal record
- slamming
- the sale of puppies younger than eight weeks of age
- regulating land developers
* Some states have laws regulating the reselling industry
- ticket reselling industry
* Some states have laws requiring any business that sells oil to take used oil back from consumers
- controlled substances to be listed on separate prescription pages
- specifically aimed at dishonest contractors
* Some states have laws that address smoking in the workplace
- apply to older teens as well
- give consumers additional rights
- prohibit children under a certain age being left alone
- provide partial protection
* Some states have laws that regulate check cashers
- drug-testing programs
- the fee structure and services by retail firms
* Some states have laws that require employers to give employees access to personnel files
- parental consent or notification when a teen seeks an abortion
- sexuality education in public schools
- specifically mention bats, either providing or denying protection
* Some states have legislation affecting ownership of cats
- around cultural and linguistic competency
- legislative restrictions on electors
- lemon laws that pertain to some used cars
- low cost prescription programs based on income
- lower tax rates for a taxpayer's principal residence
* Some states have mandatory lead screening for young children
- statewide building codes
- many more prekindergarten programs sponsored by public schools than does Oregon
- minimum ages
- more than half their land locked up in federal and state wildlife preserves
* Some states have more than one cricket team
- official state song
- team per sport representing different cities
- much stricter environmental standards than others
- multiple base lines and prime meridians
- other taxes based upon the value of deposits or shares
- periodic drought
- programs that pay individuals for damage to livestock
- prohibit marriages
- provisions requiring treatment of condemned prisoners who become mentally ill
- restrictions on the use of certain pesticides
- rules restricting claims for falls on snow and ice
- seasons that are closed during spawning season
* Some states have separate laws for used vehicles
- systems for water and for wastewater certificates
- several clubs, located in major population centers
- slaves
- special laws to protect manufactured homes owners
* Some states have specific laws allowing a health care power of attorney and provide printed forms
- regulating invention development companies
- regulations for professional fund-raisers used by charities
- strict rules regarding roadside signs
* Some states have stricter limits on doctors' charges
- regulations concerning homeschool than others
- surprisingly high rates of rabies cases
* Some states have the death penalty, and Texas, for one, uses it frequently
* Some states have their own courts of claim
- laws protecting employees from retaliation and specifying payment
- regulations pertaining to contact lenses
- rules that classify entities for tax purposes
- tuition equalization programs to assist kids who attend private schools
- unemployment
- unfair competition laws that address piracy
- very little in the way of public records online
- worker protections which exceeds federal standards
- help families care for frail elderly at home
- hold districts rather than schools accountable for performance
- impose additional state taxes on capital gains to widely varying degrees
- induce voltage
* Some states involve energy
- negative energy
- keep records of how many complaints a health plan has received
- kill pests
* Some states lead nations
- to hallucination
* Some states limit the number of kids who can ride with a teenage driver
- youngsters who can ride with a teen-age driver
- practice of hypnosis or hypnotherapy to licensed therapists only
- range of categories of products that can display an organic label
- link interstate numbers to mile markers
- maintain vocational education libraries
* Some states make it illegal even to own a breed of dog that has been declared vicious
- to own a dog that's been declared vicious
- parents financially responsible for damage caused by their children
- their registry of sex offenders available on the Internet
- notify communities of the presence of a sex offender under certain circumstances
* Some states now allow pet owners to create trusts to provide for their animals
- ban the sale of kerosene heaters for home use
- have laws mandating insurance coverage of the expensive special low protein foods
- regulate water use to prevent severe declines in ground-water levels
- support effective nest-monitoring and programs to release young birds into the wild
- offer state tax credits to employers who hire welfare recipients
* Some states only allow parents to choose schools inside the district in which they live
- have a few banks with online services and others have more than a hundred
- pass laws that allow people to obtain permits to carry concealed handguns
* Some states permit adoption by married couples only
- minors to terminate their minority status when they get married
- optometrists to give limited treatments of some eye conditions
* Some states prevent certain people from becoming agents
- drilling through multiple aquifers under certain conditions
- injecting drug users from buying needles at pharmacies
- produce toys, and many produce mattresses
* Some states prohibit adopted siblings who share no genetic link, from marrying
- an infected person from having sex at all
- lawyers from obtaining babies for adoption by clients under any circumstances
- smoking in enclosed places of employment
* Some states prohibit the direct sale and shipment of wine to the consumer
- execution of people for crimes committed in their youth
- importation of wild piranhas
- relocation of wildlife
- use of explosive devices on wildlife
- title by mere prescription or possession
- promote equal opportunity
- protect private land through purchasing development rights
* Some states provide additional unemployment benefits to workers who are disabled
- prenatal and delivery care for any person who is pregnant
- protections against age discrimination for all employees regardless of age
- put people in jail for life for having a hempseed in their car trunks
- recognize ceremony-free marriages
* Some states regulate specific types of fund raisers, such as duck races
- the amount of fees chargeable by an agency
* Some states require a physician to examine fetal tissue after an abortion
- adults, regardless of age, to have a certificate when hunting
- by law that the electors vote for the person that wins the states popular vote
- companies to insure patients for certain cancer tests and treatments
- dentists
- employment counselors to have a masters degree
- licenses for people who apply pesticides
* Some states require parents to attend mediation in contested child custody cases
- tag along when their kids get pierced
- physicians to specify conditions such as epilepsy or dementia
* Some states require public high school teachers
- sales taxes to be collected on-site for sales of books and other items
- school social workers in each public school district
- teens to have their parents permission
* Some states require that all handlers of food wear gloves
- car insurance policies also provide health insurance
- children wear a life jacket
- vaccination every year
* Some states restrict the right to vote for persons who have been convicted of a crime
- use of screens and televisions in vehicles
- reward teachers and schools for involvement in peer competition
- seal safe deposit boxes upon death
- still set consumer rates below the actual cost to generate electricity
* Some states still use coroners, a part of the legal system brought over from England
- grand juries for certain civil investigations
- strive to exceed federal standards of environmental protection
- tax gross receipts of sales of goods and services
* Some states treat gay or straight lifestyles in the same light
- the right of publicity as a subset of the right of privacy
* Some states use a mill rate to compute property taxes and sales taxes
- only flags to make motorists aware of traffic control
- standardized tests to measure the academic performance of students
- structured sentencing, most of which is based upon criminal history
- the party column ballot in general elections
- properties
* also differ in terms of how they define a family.
* also have a role in setting levels of funding
- an important role in guaranteeing equality of access
- child pornography statutes and the age of the minority varies by state
- occupational health and safety laws and agencies
- programs to monitor and enforce state liquor laws
- two Senators
- means the section of territory occupied by a state, as the state of Pennsylvania
- regulate the collection of reptiles from the wild and their subsequent use
- use standardized tests in different ways to judge the performance of school districts
- vary greatly in their rates of growth
* are also major financers of long-term care
- attributes
* are caused by excessive intake
- child's play
- emotional states
- important consumers of goods and services
- just imaginary lines on a map
- laboratories for legal innovation
- located in countries
- made of counties
- natural entities, and like other natural objects they have a goal or end
* are organized like the federal government, with three branches of government
- with three government branches
- political subdivisions, put in place by human beings
- purely states of position
* are responsible for delivering a broad array of transportation services
- enacting standards governing the transaction of insurance
- temporary experiences, which come and go
* are the characteristics, and the soul of a confederation
- core of the society and associate together because of shared values and interests
- great laboratories of democracy
- largest purchaser of health care in every regional market
- natural condition of human society
* are the primary governmental divisions of the United States
- subjects of international law
- principal organizations constituted by the people
- protectors of civil rights
- stages which a 'document' flows through during a process
- variables such as fatigue, hunger, etc
* can be geographical areas, physiological states or behavioural status
- diversify across industries and across foreign countries
- regulate every aspect of the insurance industry
* change states.
* come into being on the basis of the exercise of self-determination by their peoples.
* consistently report metals as a major cause of impairment to lakes.
* contribute to variation.
* country whose ports a vessel visits.
* depend on conditions
* differ considerably in their political structure.
* enact laws to protect their cemeteries
- their own safety, fire prevention and building codes
* generally have their own systems for environmental cleanup programs
- use treaties to create international law
* has several more hours of daylight in summer than in winter.
* have a primary responsibility in protecting the health and safety of their citizens
- wide range of laws regarding fossil and mineral collecting
* have an important role in protecting the health of their own populations
- obligation to respect, protect, promote and fulfil women's enjoyment of human rights
- appearances
* have as many electoral college votes as they have congressional delegates
- electors as their combined number of congressmen and senators
- broad powers to regulate the import and export of species
- child labor laws as well
* have different laws regarding the use and disclosure of used materials in mattresses
- requiring seat belt use
- procedures by which they prosecute individuals accused of committing crimes
- rules regarding adoption by homosexuals or same sex couples
- sales tax rates
- differing laws regarding drug tests
- distinct climates, industries and populations
- distinctive properties
- education requirements
* have formal education requirements
- length limits
- limitations
- militaries, states have gulag systems, and states have legitimating ideologies
- own rules
- political leaders
- powers, but important powers go to national government
- primary responsibility for regulating the health and safety of their citizens
- regulations regarding the marketing of meat for human consumption
- roles
- the longest tradition of supporting graduate education
* have the power to make, collect, and spend their own taxes
- regulate many forms of conduct
- primary responsibility for education
- right and responsibility to manage their wildlife and plants
- trials
* help companies.
* impose gas taxes to pay for highway projects and other needs
- mercury emission reduction rules
- unemployment taxes independent of the federal government
* increasingly rely on gambling for their state revenue.
* interfere with the right of persons with disabilities to vote.
* involves the attitude of organizations to internal causes and to external circumstances.
* is environment
- synonymous with war
* is the most inclusive association within a territory
- name of the coldest of all cold monsters
- usually the main state agency that deals with elementary and secondary education
* maintain a great deal of responsibility over the regulation of healthcare providers.
* need assistance.
* now have laws allowing individuals to carry concealed handguns.
* offer representations
* often use federal regulations as the core of their own safety and health programs.
* oriented domains are a superset of taskoriented domains.
* play a very important role in the conservation of threatened and endangered species
- an important role in formulating policies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
- important roles in both protecting public safety and improving healthcare systems
- key roles in both natural resource science and management
* presently regulate human use and interaction with animals through anti-cruelty statutes.
* protect the agriculture industry in order to keep their populations fed.
* provide opportunity
- statements
- terrestrial tv services
* receive rainfall
* recognize governments.
* refers to the effect of fields, collisions, and constraints.
* regulate insurance prices and providers pay agents for distribution
- medical and other health care professionals through licensure
- solid waste and therefore control methane emissions from land fills
- state forests and certain aspects of agricultural policy
- the practice of homeopathy
- uptake
* relates to ecological processes or to a part or parts of ecological systems.
* remain the predominant actors in the international political system.
* require attention
- contact lens education
- continue education
- genetic counselors
* require public schools
- secondary schools
* spend billions of dollars each year on tobacco-related problems.
* take actions.
* tuple containing the state of the coder.
* typically apply legal rules and sanctions to regulate behaviour.
* use a variety of means to divide their populations into various identity categories.
* vary considerably according to their economic condition and the cost of living
- enormously in their per capita annual expenditures on long-term care
- greatly in the mix of taxes, fees, and assessments used to fund public services
- in the way they govern, organize, fund, and administer their schools and districts
* vary widely in age structure and risk group composition
- their child care policies and funding levels
+ Acupuncture: Medical procedures :: China
* Acupuncture was developed by the Chinese about 5,000 years ago. It is still used today. It uses the Chinese philosophy of yin and yang. Chinese doctors have performed surgery with acupuncture as the only anesthetic. Recently, acupuncture has begun to be accepted in the West. Many states now accept schools of acupuncture. Some doctors are studying and using acupuncture. In the United States acupuncture has often been used to help control pain and drug and alcohol addiction. It is also often used to treat headaches, asthma, and arthritis. It is widely agreed that acupuncture treatment is safe when done by well-trained doctors using clean needles. It is also agreed, though, that more study is needed.
+ Barber, Job Description: Personal service occupations
* With experience, barbers can manage a salon or barber shop, or eventually open their own shop. Advancement is also possible in teaching barbering. Some states combine barbering and cosmetology licenses into one. Some states allow transferring a barbering license from another state without additional formal training, but not all states allow this.
+ Common scold, Current status of the law
* The offence of being a common scold has also become obsolete in the United States because only women could commit it. This was found to violate the U.S. Constitution's Equal Protection Clause. Many states have laws restricting public profanity, loud noise in public, and disorderly conduct. None of these laws have any punishment similar to those traditionally used for the common scold.
+ List of U.S. state slogans
* Here is a list of U.S. state slogans. Most states create slogans to help tourism. These slogans are sometimes put on state license plates.
* There are different forms of government a state can have, for example a republic or a monarchy. Sometimes states form their own countries. Most states also have armed forces, civil service, law and police
- songs
+ Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program: Food and drink :: United States Department of Agriculture
* As of September 2012, almost 48 million people received benefits. Some states get more food assistance than other states. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Stress
* Away is used to counteract the detrimental effects of stress.
* Every stress produces a state of tension in the body.
* Helps to relieve the stress associated with abuse on body, mind and spirit.
* Learn how to manage, cope with, and prevent stress.
* Most stress stems from people failing to decide instantly on the next step.
* Much stress is caused by trying to live up to unrealistic expectations of one's self.
* Reducing Uncertainty Uncertainty can cause high levels of stress.
* Some Stress is Good People tend to talk about stress as if it s all bad.
* Some stress can be a stimulus for higher achievement
- increases the chance of illness
* Some stress is actually a healthy aspect of living
- part of everyone s life
- normal part of daily life
* activates adaptive responses.
* activates the adrenal glands
- blood clotting mechanism and it leads to serious health consequences
- hypothalamus, the pituitary gland and the adrenal gland
* adversely affects several physiological processes and increases symptom reporting
- effects physical health and quality of life
* affects all of the body s systems
- behavior
- children as well
- cholesterol levels negatively
* affects different people in different ways, but sleep deprivation inhibits performance
- everyone differently
- individuals differently
- men in different ways
- mental functioning, which in turn affects physiological functioning
* affects our bodies
- immune system
- people from all backgrounds
- peoples' health and it certainly affects our energy levels
* affects the autonomic nervous system
- digestive system
* affects the immune response in koi in much the same way as higher animals
- system in a number of ways
- lives of all people, everywhere
- thoughts
* also adds to depressions.
* also affects behavior
- morale
- parenting skills
- sperm production and motility
* also appears to aggravate acne
- contribute to ulcers
- play a role in bruxism
- breaks down our immunities to common diseases such as colds and influenza
* also can cause major interference with short-term memory
- destroy chromium levels
- have a direct effect on the way people handle their jobs
* also causes an overproduction of natural cholesterol
- health problems including some serious heart diseases
- sweating, itching and hives
- the blood to clot more easily
* also contributes to susceptibility
- the distortion of perception
- creates hypertension which can lead to other cardiovascular problems
- decreases the release of neurotrophins, which can impair macrophage function
- deteriorates the body's general ability to heal itself
- exerts a negative effect on the cow's immune system
- figures prominently in headache and increased incidence of musculo-skeletal pain
- helps to bring out the disease as it makes carrier birds shed the virus
- increases production, but probably the most common cause is obesity
- influences our behavior, which can in turn affect our health
- leads to the release of arachidonic acid from the membrane phospholipids
- lowers blood sugar, particularly blood sugar to the brain
- makes breeding difficult for fish and even shortens their lives
- occurs when feeding if the fish have to compete for food
* also plays a major role in the disease
- part in fueling compulsive sexual behavior
- role, as does repeatedly touching the skin on the face
* also plays an important role in human motivation
- teeth grinding
- reduces blood flow to the hands, causing cooling
- results in depressed immune systems, resulting in more frequent illness
- robs the body of necessary nutrient levels
- triggers eczema
- weakens the immune system making a person more likely to become sick as well
* alters the body's functions and produces all kinds of changes.
* appears to also diminish the levels of many essential nutrients in the body.
* appears to be a factor in the number and severity of episodes
- an important factor in breaking down the bird's resistance
* appears to be related to an increased production of a hormone called cortisol
- the occurrence of the number of injuries
- increase the risk for a cold regardless of lifestyle or other health habits
- make bighorns susceptible to a variety of bacterial, viral, and fungal infections
- prevent all but the dominant males from achieving reproductive success
* are tensors because it vector divided by another vector
- the load per area that are the result of the internal forces and moments
- types of degradation or impairment afflicting the system
* associated with abortion is acute stress, typically ending with the procedure
- depression encourages physical fatigue and lowers our resistance to illness
* barrier to the body's return to a normal state of equilibrium.
* big issue across all age groups because of the restructuring of a lifestyle.
* biochemical response to perceived threat
* boosts bloodstream levels of androgen in women as well as in men.
* breaks down organic matter, creating disease
- our immune system and creates unwanted problems
* breaks down the protective mucous coating on a fish and allows bacteria to gain a foothold
- on a fish and allows parasites to gain a foothold
* brings on physical illness and injuries
- upon different hormone levels
* build up in rocks where plates interact.
* builds up in fault zones when crustal blocks stick together.
* can actually damage tissues and worsen heart disease.
* can affect all reflexes
- any body system and aggravate any chronic disease
- children, too
- everything from sleep patterns to job performance to breathing
- our work, health, relationships and, most importantly, our peace of mind
- periodontal disease and can make the infection more severe and harder to fight
* can affect the immune system
- way people think, act, and feel
* can aggravate acne by increasing the secretion of adrenal hormones
- pain, but can also be caused by pain
- also activate dormant cysts
* can also affect early nutrient uptake and the resulting fruit quality
- hormone levels and can explain why some adults develop acne
* can also affect the immune system by raising blood pressure
- levels of androgens, resulting in further breakouts
- worker attitudes and behavior
- arise from internal factors, as it happens for genetic and chromosomal anomalies
* can also be a contributor to asthma episodes
- major factor to aging skin
* can also be a side effect of a serious illness or disease
- of various drugs, medicine, etc
* can also cause a female plant to produce viable seeds without being fertilized
- host of problems to the human body, as well as disrupt the digestive system
- loss of appetite to the point of anorexia leading to a loss of weight
- person to breathe rapidly, or hyperventilate
- problem in both hair loss and dandruff
- illness indirectly by altering a person's behaviour pattern
- muscle tension, leading to pain in the neck, back, head, or elsewhere
- narrowing of the arteries, restricting blood flow to the scalp
- shortness of breath, acne, sleeplessness or changes in sleep patterns
- soreness by interfering with sleep
- the oil glands to kick into overdrive
- contribute to sinus problems
- have an impact on the body in more serious and potentially life threatening ways
* can also increase a yearning for extra snacks and high-fat comfort foods
- blood pressure that has been shown to be a frequent cause of impotence
- food needs
- prolactin levels, so perhaps there are several factors at work
- inhibit the aerobic system
* can also intensify or create health concerns
- the anxiety
- lead to serious forms of abuse
- make hemorrhoids flare up
- manifest itself emotionally, such as sleeplessness preoccupation, and worry
- mimic physical illness and the symptom vary in each individual
- originate from emotional and psychological causes
* can also play a major role in the relapses of rosacea
- part in the development of heart disease
- role in development of heart disease and other serious disorders
- rekindle cravings
- result when a person develops a mental illness
- serve as an impetus for production and creativity
- sometimes cause ulcers
- stem from differences in thermal expansion coefficients of different layers
* can also trigger an arrhythmia
- psoriasis to appear for the first time or make an existing case more severe
- upset feline appetites
* can alter fluid and electrolyte balances and lead to dehydration
- the cholesterol levels even when the diet remains unchanged
- and does affect every aspect of life
- arise out of difficulties at home, in relationships, and in the workplace
- be a cause of hair loss
* can be a factor in heart disease, ulcers and high blood pressure
- many gastrointestinal problems
- hard one to deal with in the aftermath of childbirth
- huge factor when it comes to bear reproduction
- major cause of inappropriate elimination in cats of all ages
* can be a major factor in a sagging libido
- infertility
- positive force in gifted people
- reaction to people, places, events or things
- risk factor in relationships, safety, and health
- trigger for people with asthma
- an everyday fact of life
- both physical and mental
* can be either mentally, emotionally, physically, or environmentally induced
- physical or emotional in nature
- habit forming and, as such, it is often triggered without thought
- harmful by affecting our physical and emotional health
- particularly hard to recognize in children and teens
- present in good or bad situations
- seriously injurious to long-term health and color of hair
- the kiss of death or the spice of life
- become a way of life
* can bring on depression or mania in susceptible individuals
- tension in the muscles of the body
- build up, as one thing after another goes wrong in a single day
* can cause a defective immune system to act up
- drop in progesterone, a hormone which helps maintain pregnancy
- heart attack
- person to become angry or sad
- plant to age and flower prematurely
- variety of reactions, many of which are somatic
- acid to build up in our body
- backaches, but blaming back pain on stress can be dangerous
- changes in it
* can cause headaches, allergies, asthma, diarrhea, ulcers
- and a tightening of the muscles in the neck, back, and shoulders
- heartburn, stomach ulcers, and many other problems
- high blood pressure, skin problems, insomnia, and worse
- hives in certain people, for example, a student facing a particularly tough exam
- hormone imbalance and make fibroids worse
- insomnia, but insomnia also increases stress
- large bowel diarrhea in excitable dogs
* can cause many ailments, as there link between emotional and physical illness
- digestive, heart, and nervous problems
- symptoms on the body
- muscles to tense and can cause distraction - both increase the risk of injury
- our bodies to react unfavorably
- parvo or any other disease to manifest
- physical problems such as depression or headaches
- psychological as well as physical effects
- shock which occurs when the blood circulating system shuts down
* can cause the adrenal glands to produce too little of a hormone called cortisol
- bird, if it persists to disturb, to pluck until it bleeds
- blood sugar to rise
* can cause the body s stores of several key nutrients to drop by as much as one-third
- to release the hormones adrenaline or noradrenaline
- levels of a neurotransmitter called noradrenalin to rise
- weight gain or weight loss
- certainly raise blood sugars
* can come from painful experiences as it can also result from pleasure
- the usual things that happen in our lives and from unusual events
- in many different forms
- compromise chemical and structural defenses of species
- continue for weeks, months, even years
* can contribute to high blood pressure which in turn can lead to stroke
- premature aging
- two common mental illnesses
* can create a breeding ground for illness
- deficiencies in many nutrients and vice versa
- muscle tension, causing a loss in flexibility that can lead to back pain
- damage health, cause illness, and create other disruptive symptoms
- decrease resistance to infection
- definitely produce physical symptoms
- degrade a person's health
* can deplete our energy and interfere with our concentration
- the B vitamins as well
- do a number on a person
- either shorten or lengthen the menstrual cycle
- elevate blood sugar values due to the action of various hormones
* can even affect the body physically
- skin and complexion
- propel some people to achieve things they never thought possible
- exacerbate psoriasis, as can heavy drinking and smoking
- generate the energy that motivates
* can have a dramatic impact on the immune system
- lot to do with the lack of a pregnancy
- negative impact on sperm quality
- significant impact on personal health
- an important role as a trigger of acute ischemic attacks
- many effects on the body and mind
- the potential to cause disease, even death
- help people develop their resiliency
- hinder conception, even if the stress stems from the trying
- hit people at any age and is affecting a growing number of people in Sussex
- imbalance self-control and increase making frequent poor food choices
- impair the ability to perform mentally
* can increase blood glucose levels
- the reflux of acid particularly if it occurs during or after meals
- induce hair loss as can dieting or a poor diet generally
- influence mental flexibility
- initiate dermatological conditions such as itchy skin and rashes
- interfere with the hormones needed to assist in sperm production
- irritate asthma and gastrointestinal disorders like ulcers and irritable bowel syndrome
- kill wildlife if over handled, especially babies
- lead first to intermittent and then to constant high blood pressure
* can lead to alcohol , drug abuse and bad eating habits
- depression, particularly for the chronic pain sufferer and their caregivers
- flamingos being more susceptible to other causes of death
- forceful voice production, resulting in possible tissue damage
- high blood pressure, one of the main causes of heart disease
- many things
* can lead to or exacerbate medical conditions
- worsen emotional and physical symptoms
- overeating, and being overweight is stressful
- poorer heats and subsequent delays in conception
- thinning of the bones
- literally burn our bodies out prematurely
- lower resistance to disease by suppressing the immune system
* can make a yeast infection worse
- many conditions worse, including acne, psoriasis and eczema
- people with mental illness vulnerable to relapse
- some people have more frequent migraine headaches
- spasms more severe
- manifest itself as a headache, pain, and even anger
* can manifest itself in a variety of ways
- ways psychological, physiological and behavioral
- occur when an unplanned pregnancy arises at a difficult time
- often affect the immune system, so it's important that it is always kept at a minimum
* can often be a contributing factor to insomnia
- daily part of our lives
- the result of feeling out of control
- oftentimes lead to physical symptoms and cause dysfunctional workplaces
- play a big part in how long a captive mouse lives
- prevent pregnancy from occurring
- promote hormonal changes and cause flareups
- pull bone away from the growth plate, ripping the bone
- really affect a person with diabetes
* can reduce appetite in the short run
- gastric acidity even further
- milk production
- the body's reserves of minerals, as can caffeine and other diuretics
- their lifespan
- refer to physical effort as well as mental tension
- release hormones which can make people susceptible to blood clotting
- result from improper reactions to life's smallest to largest problems
* can result in depression, anxiety and illness
- high testosterone levels
- occupational accidents due to a lack of concentration
- the heightened activity of many body organs
- serve to develop and nurture character
- set up a tension within the individual, resulting in anxiety
- shorten the life expectancy of guppies
* can show itself in bodily changes and emotional, cognitive, and behavioral reactions
- up in the form of an inability to concentrate, forgetfulness, and poor judgement
- slow brain development
* can slow down brain growth
- digestion and trigger inflammation
- sometimes throw off a woman's menstrual cycle, making ovulation hard to predict
- suppress the immune system
* can take a physical toll on children as well as adults
* can then lead to a damaged immune system leaving the whales more susceptible to infection
- trigger secondary problems, such as poor growth, poor reproduction and diseases
- therefore be a major cause in the deterioration of good health
* can trigger headaches and tummyaches
- manic attacks
- outbreaks even when populations of lesion nematodes are low
- physical injuries
- upset a person physically and mentally
- worsen feelings of fatigue
* caused by a loss or devastating experience can take several forms
- bereavement, loneliness, finances and ill health can contribute to sleeplessness
- new surroundings can cause fatal birth complications
- overwatering or lack of water can lead to increased root rot disease
* causes a complex psychophysiological chain reaction in the human body.
* causes a desire to breathes
- dreams
- difficulty in falling asleep or remaining asleep for many people
- number of illnesses in employees
- return to earlier behavior patterns throughout the animal kingdom
- weakened immune system and the potenial for illness
- an increase in adrenaline production and adrenaline causes the breathing to increase
- blood vessels to consrict, making heart and blood vessels overwork
- circles under the eyes, as well as stimulating the sebaceous glands, triggering acne
- facial muscles to become tense and pull the skin unevenly
- fatigue, which often results in a decreased interest in sex
- headaches, insomnia, migraines, fatigue, and so on
- health and social problems when people fail to handle it properly
- heart attacks
- increases in the adrenal gland hormones including corticosteroids and catecholamines
- mental disorders, therefore stress is bad
- more medical problems than all other causes
- much worse body odor than physical exertion
- muscles to tighten, resulting in neck or shoulder pain and headaches
- obesity in humans
- people to take shallow, incomplete breaths
- permanent hair loss
- physical complications, such as hypertension, cardiac difficulty, and headaches
- sleep deprivation, irritability and even panic attacks
- some persons to lose, others to gain
- tension and tension zaps emotional and physical energy
- the blood vessels, including the coronary arteries, to constrict, or tighten
* causes the body to create free radicals
- produce more adrenal hormones, especially adrenaline
- use up nutrients and at the same time people often start eating poorly
- muscles in the back to tighten or spasm
* classic source of fatigue.
* clearly affects physical, mental, emotional and social well-being.
* combination of factors that affect each individual differently.
* combined with a bad diet can induce anovulatory cycles.
* comes from everyday life
- many sources, diet, fatigue, emotions, bowel distress
* comes in all shapes and sizes
- the different forms
* comes in many different forms and at many different times
- when there crossover from one job description to another
* common cause and exacerbator of high blood pressure
- of insomnia
- element in everyday life
- exacerbating factor for epilepsy in many persons
* common factor in many diseases
- that all couples planning a wedding share
- holiday experience for adults and children alike
- medical problem, and walking natural way to help manage it
- part of everyday life and can be beneficial in some situations
- problem that can affect anyone at any time
- thing that is experienced in our everyday lives
* complex of different factors and apparently has a real influence on health
- phenomenon
* compounding factor.
* condition that affects both the body and the mind.
* congests the liver and constricts the blood vessels.
* constant and essential part of daily living
- for most victims of stalking
* contributes to breakouts, especially in adults
- headaches, high blood pressure and insomnia
- heart disease, high blood pressure, strokes and other illnesses
- muscle tension, and perpetuation of the pain cycle
- numerous mental disorders and impairs cognition
- the pain because it makes the muscles tense
* contributory cause of many illnesses as well as having negative social consequences
- factor to fish in the overall lowering of general health
* crack resistance and useful temperature range also vary with crystalline structure.
* creates chemical changes in the brain and can turn the sweetest person into a monster
- less margin for error for nutrition's contribution to physiological maintenance
- the expression of disorders and deficits
* culprit in many health problems.
* daily factor for many people, especially college students.
* decreases immune function.
* decreases the body's ability to fight infection
- quality of life by reducing feelings of pleasure and accomplishment
* demand for adaptation and is necessary for growth.
* depletes crucial nutrients and creates a higher demand for specific vitamins and minerals
- serotonin
* depresses the immune mechanism, thus increasing our chances of contracting cancer.
* deteriorates interpersonal relationships.
* develop in films during thermal cycling and are modified by lithography.
* diminishes live weight gains, mainly because of a decrease in fat deposition.
* directly affects birth rates.
* disrupts the circadian rhythms of the body, as does depression.
* does have a cumulative effect on the body
- increase the blood sugar level
- make blood pressure go up, but only temporarily
* drives crime, domestic violence, drug dependency.
* drop reduction in stress across a fault, e.g. caused by an earthquake.
* elevates blood sugar levels, and yoga reduces stress
- sugars in people
* even plays a role in how well a person can resist disease.
* exacerbates hair loss, increases wrinkles.
* exerted is proportional to the sub-gridscale variance of topography and the wind speed.
* exists in every aspect of life
* fact of life for women
- life, especially during one s college years
* factor in everyone's life, but when illness strikes it only seems to make matters worse
- most degenerative illnesses, and most chronic mental conditions
* feeling of tension as the body's response to a perceived physical or emotional threat
- that is both emotional and physical
* flow like water.
* force applied over a specific area of a rock so as to compress it
- per unit area, while a strain deformation
* function of force divided by area.
* general term for a lot of specific problems that affect the mind and body.
* happens every day, and it is part of every living thing's normal life.
* has a detrimental effect on one's health
- physiological effect on the body which makes the urine acidic
- an important impact on itching
- lesser effects on diabetes, immune function, and brain aging
* has many different meanings
- negative effects on the body
- negative consequences for health
- no effect on the development of heart disease
- sexually dimorphic effects on pair bonding in prairie voles
* highly emotional experience.
* hinders digestion and the cleansing process.
* huge cause of acne.
* human cost of the risky business of farming.
* impacts health
- the body's immune system leading to prolonged illness and fatigue
* impairs the immune system, and can increase animals' susceptibility to disease.
* imparted unequally can in most alloys cause a decrease in strength and durability.
* includes such feelings as anxiety, worry and apprehension
- things like starvation, and other threats to homeostasis
* increase stomach acid production and decreases blood flow
- the activity of kinases in order to down-regulate translation
* increases both the severity and duration of bruxism while asleep
- catecholamines, which cause platelets to stick together
- cortisol production
* increases heart rate and blood pressure, raising excitement levels
* increases levels of certain hormones
- cortisol, which in turn can reduce the number of fighter white cells
- muscle tension, pain and feelings of helplessness, frustration and depression
- muscular tension
- risk of cardiovascular disease, psychological disorders, and workplace injury
* increases the heart rate as much as heavy physical exercise
- metabolism of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates
- rate of wear and tear the body experiences
* increases the risk of becoming ill by lowering our resistance to disease
- heart disease, a major complication of hyperlipidemia
- secretion of all hormones listed
- secretory products of rat nasal mucosa goblet cells
* inescapable part of daily living.
* inhibits learning and memory, our ability to function optimally and live joy-filled lives.
* injures the liver system, and the free flow of qi is blocked.
* interferes with health and vitality.
* interferes with the body's natural flow of energy
- immune response and lowers immunity
- physiological processes involved in healing
* irritates the immature digestive system, causing baby to spit up and increases diaper rashes.
* is A. force per unit area.
* is actually a natural reaction of the human body
- normal, healthy reaction to life's challenges
- the single most commonly identified trigger of migraine attacks
- almost always due to being out of balance
* is also a common precursor of psychological diffi-culties such as anxiety and depression
- contributor to premature aging
- key element of the loss of business productivity
- major factor in any illness
- risk factor for depression and suicide
- an indicator of boundaries
- the main cause of a deteriorating slime coat that protects the fish
- always present in life
* is an abnormal condition that disrupts the normal functions of the body or mind
- effect of life change
- element of nature that affects every individual
* is an essential component of life
- part of life
* is an everyday experience for captive birds
* is an everyday part of legal life
- many of our lives
- important component in psychological dysfunction
* is an important factor in life quality
- muscle contraction or tension-type headache
- the reactivation of latent virus in carriers
- when trying to physically get to sleep in the first place
- indicator in the onset of bleeding
- individual reaction
- industrial issue that unions and members can take action on
* is an inescapable part of life
- reality of daily work life
- inevitable part of life affecting health, productivity, and relationships
- inside job, an internal response to an external cue
- integral part of life
- overload to the nervous system
- unavoidable aspect of life
* is an unavoidable consequence of every-day life
- underlying factor in the development of disease
- unending aspect of life
* is another condition associated with platelet aggregation
- culprit of diarrhea and other health ailments
* is another factor involved in the choice of suicide
- linked to hair loss
* is another factor that can cause tension in the head
- is related to large numbers of organisms
- thought to affect reproductive strategy
- form of indigestion
- reason people avoid work
* is any event that a person perceives as threatening or harmful
- event, positive or negative, that causes physical, mental or emotional response
- mental or physical demand that is placed on a person
* is any physical or mental demand placed on a person
- response made on an individual
- situation that evokes negative thoughts and feelings in a person
- anything that energizes or creates tension for our bodies
- arousal of mind and body in resonse to demands made upon it
- as much of a disease for humans as any other pathogen
* is associated with heart attacks, cancer, the common cold, and cardiovascular disease
- disease and some cancers
- assumed to cause mental health
- at the heart of many diseases
- basically the body's nonspecific response to any demand
* is believed to be an important factor in high blood pressure
- have the same effect on our human brains and bodies
- both psychological and physical
- built up from boredom, lack of exercise, physical restriction, or physical punishment
- by no means a universal factor in causing peptic ulcer disorders
* is caused by a variety of situations and is characterized by red flushing and itching
- an outside source such as a difficult exam which then processed by the brain
- any type of demand
- emotions, chiefly fear
* is caused by many different factors
- factors in a student's life
- outside influences and it is unknown why the brain reacts the way it does
- more than a hectic schedule or overly tense muscles, however
- something else entirely
* is caused by the body's instinct to defend itself
- inner self being constricted, being forced into a box
- outside world
- release of the hormone cortisol in the bloodstream
- too much to do with too little time in which to do it
- when there disconnect between our expectation and our reality
- certainly transmittable from animal to animal and species to species
- closely related to nutrition
- colored by previous experiences, conditioning, and the character of the noise itself
- common for all family members
- composed of stressors and stress responses
* is considered a cause for smoking by many people
- factor in development of disease and cancer
- major contributor to high blood pressure
- an important precipitating factor for seizures
* is created by trying to manage thoughts with other thoughts
- when the body adjusts to the external demands placed on it
- credited as the source of every ailment
* is cumulative and as stress builds up it causes an increase in blood pressure and heart rate
- high levels of stress keep the adrenal glands busy
- destructive to our body, disorganizing to our mind, and disabling to our spirit
* is different from pressure
- in everyone, and everyone has a different threshold for tolerating stress
- differential pressure
- difficult to escape in the modern world but, sadly, it can cause infertility
* is difficult to measure, because people react differently to similar circumstances
- but it has the overall effect of weakening the immune system
- dysphoria
- emphasis
- encountered in almost every aspect of our lives
- epidemic in American life
* is epidemic in the western world
- workplace today
- epidemics
- essential to life
- examined from biological, psychological, and social perspectives
- far more basic to health than is diet
- fatigue for psychics
- felt among children and adults alike
* is force divided by area
- imposed on rocks
- per unit area, either of contact or cross-section, depending on the test
- found to raise risk of a heart attack
- harmful because it can make animals or people more likely to get sick
* is identified as a major cause for most of the diseases
- the single largest factor presumed to have an impact on employee health
- implicated in many diseases
* is important because it can completely change the meaning of a word
- is stress that causes bats to break
- important, whether it is environmental, psychological or physiological
- imposed when calves are asked to adapt to change
* is in all classes of people, high class right down to low class
- our body and also in our mind
* is increasingly a reason for for workers to call in sick
- inflection
* is key in triggering symptoms
- to meaning, and it only exists through contrast
* is known to affect the immune system adversely
- be the root cause of many illnesses and social problems found in society today
* is known to cause diseases in humans
- poor health in some people
- contribute to a variety of illnesses, and can exacerbate chronic illnesses
- make acne worse
- produce chemical changes within the body
- suppress one's ability to fight off illness
* is like alcohol and tobacco recognized as harmful, yet seen as necessary by some
- starting a car engine or pushing the accelerator pedal to speed up
- likely to occur when the plants appear wilted and the leaves curl
* is linked to most of the health problems in our population
- the breakdown of the immune system, which makes people more prone to disease
* is manifested in many ways and puts an extra load on our bodies
- the body by a nonspecific response
* is measured as force per unit area
- in units of force per area
- nearly synonymous with anaerobic training
- necessary for life
* is often a factor in tension headaches
- primary or aggravating cause of health problems
- trigger for abuse
- an important etiological factor in the production of schizophrenic symptoms
* is often the natural byproduct of time distress
- reason most people impulse eat as opposed to only eating when hungry
- underlying source of health problems in caregivers
* is on letter structure, shape, character and proportion
- prefixes, suffixes, and word roots
- words in context
* is one factor which is known to trigger or exacerbate psychological disorders
- half of a natural adaptive and creative cycle
* is one of the biggest causes of reduced antibody production
- factors in verbal and emotional abuse
- great hidden costs in the livestock industry
* is one of the leading causes of both mental and physical illness
- of death of firefighters
- of ill health in our society
- main causes for weight gain
* is one of the major causes of aging prematurely
- of infertility in couples who have no problems otherwise
- killers of reptiles
- occupational health problems facing workers
- triggers of cold sores
- most pervasive and damaging workforce problems facing today's employee
- motivators of life
- prices to pay for a higher salary
- primary causes of allergies
- underlying problems of fibromyalgia
- thing that people can take control of to improve their health
- one's reaction to different situations
* is our body's response to violence
- physical reaction to the pressures of living
- response to anything that threatens our survival
- pain and illness is ultimately the same
* is part of everyday life, and holidays are no exception
- everyone's daily life
- perhaps the most common cause of a missed period in nonpregnant women
- phenomenons
- physical or emotional tension
- physical, mental, or emotional strain or tension
- physiological response, whose purpose is to mobilize the reserves of the body
* is placed on structures and modes of formation of clays and associated minerals
- the responsible treatment of animals and wildlife
- predominant in our society
- pressure from external circumstances that can cause internal tensions
* is probably the biggest factor in the loss of cellular memory
- main reason for kids dropping out of school
- produced by change, the disruption of homeostatic equilibrium
- prosody
- regarded as one of the most serious threats to both physical and mental health
* is related to change
- conflict
- positive and negative events, as well as internal and external demands
- the external forces causing deformation
- relieved as chronic tightness, fatigue and pain dissipate
- response to a demand for change
* is simply reaction as the means of dealing with pressure
- the biological response of an individual to a perceived threat
* is simply the body's non-specific response to any demand made on it
- reaction to perceived threats or harmful stimuli
- so common in our society today and it often aggravates many diseases
* is something that costs employers a lot of money
- alot of money
- everyone has experienced at one time or another
- struggle
- synonymous with life
- tension or pressures that are a natural part of living our lives
* is the amount of force for a given unit of area
- applied force, strain is the change in shape
- best-know cause of many modern mental health afflictions
- biggest trigger to re-start smoking
- biological link between stressor and symptom
* is the body s non-specific response to any demand placed upon it
- way of dealing with trying situations
* is the body's adaptive response to abnormal circumstances
- automatic response to any physical or mental demand placed upon it
- natural response to pressure of any kind
* is the body's non-specific response to any demand made on it
- nonspecific response to any increased demand placed upon it
* is the body's reaction to an event that is experienced as disturbing or threatening
* is the body's response to a threatening condition
- an event or occurrence
* is the body's response to any demand or pressure
- demand put upon it
- challenging situations and circumstances
- outside disturbances
- cause of a number of odd behaviors
- consequence of too many people and too little space
- deforming force per area
- effect of pressures on our emotional and physical state
- fastest growing disease in the western world
- force applied per unit area
* is the force applied to a body
- the materials through four basic types
- exerted on a rock to cause deformation
- per unit area and has been traditionally expressed in pounds per square inch
- human response to changes that occur as a part of daily living
- internal resistance of any metal to distortion
* is the leading cause in breakdown of the immune and nervous systems
- of disease and eventually death
* is the main cause of insomnia
- productivity decline in the workplace
* is the major cause of a lot of our drug and alcohol problems
- contributor of mental and emotional breakdowns
- measure of a force in a certain area
- mind and body's reaction to any demand put upon it
* is the most common cause of insomnia
- short-term insomnia
- common, leading to tightening and spasm in the intestinal muscles
- frequently reported health problem in the United States
- important factor in pest control
- non-specific response of the body to any demand made upon it
- number of normal responses for self-preservation
* is the number one cause of disability in the United States
- short-term sleeping difficulties , according to sleep experts
- sleep problems
- workplace medical problems
- contributor to fatigue
- indicator of the likelihood of having a heart attack or stroke
- killer, in that it major contributor to heart disease
- migraine trigger
* is the number one problem in relationships and comes in many forms
- that effects every aspect of our lives
- reason people experience back and neck pain
- operative word in accounting and the business environment
* is the physical and emotional response to both internally and externally generated stressors
- reaction of the body when it is alerted to flee or fight
- physical, emotional, or chemical response of the body to demands made upon it
- physiological and emotional reaction to psychological events
- reaction of our bodies and minds to something that upsets their normal balance
- real X factor
- reason most smokers give for failing to stay tobacco-free
- response of the mind and body to danger
* is the result of emotional or psychological influences
- extra-heavy physical or mental demand on a person
- stressors and stress reaction
* is the sum total of pressures converging on a person
- wear and tear on the person
- tension that the body exerts as it seeks to return to a steady-state
- underlying cause of all that goes wrong in life
- usual cause of an anole turning brown
- watch word
* is the way our bodies react to sudden drastic demands
- respond to any new, threatening or exciting situation
* is thought to cause a variety of physical and mental health problems
- contribute to depression
- exacerbate a number of diseases, some of which are skin disorders
- upon comprehension, pronunciation, speaking, listening, reading, writing, and vocabulary
- usually a risk factor for unhealthy lifestyles, which can lead to heart attacks
- well known to be a major factor contributing to the risk of premature delivery
* is what happens when the mind overrides our common sense
- makes families grow, parents mature, and children blossom
- when life's demands seem too heavy
- why a ladybug excretes liquids
* keeps about one million people a day from going to work.
* kills brain cells
- sexual desire leading to infrequent intercourse in the case of both men and women
* kills, especially work-related stress.
* kind of worried feeling about life or work.
* large component of living with any child with special needs.
* leading cause of energy blockage which leads to pain and disease
- to other well known illnesses
* leads an attack on the immune system
- parents to become more irritated with the child, so that interaction is impaired
* leads to depression, loss of self-esteem, decreased productivity, and increased absenteeism
- illness and absenteeism
- lifestyle choices that in turn lead to nutritional deprivation
- many chronic syndromes, or chronic illnesses classified by Chinese medicine
- severe tension in the skin of the scalp
- tension, physical and emotional strain
- upset stomachs, headaches, and sleepless nights
* life event or situation that causes imbalance in an individual's life.
* limiting factor in assisted reproduction in wild animals maintained in captivity.
* load applied to a unit area of material.
* lowers one's resistance to disease
- our body's ability to adapt to changes in our environment
* major cause of both migraine and tension-type headache
- illness and aging
- job dissatisfaction, burnout, and even work injury
- worsening of psoriasis
* major contributing factor in all disease
- many of today ' s debilitating diseases and death
* major factor in allergies
- heightening symptoms
- many people's lives
- teeth grinding and clinching
* major factor in the body's own healing time
- breakdown of the body
- manufacture and release of excess cholesterol by the body
- increasing pain perception
* major health concern that affects everybody
- is associated with heart disease
- muscle eater, so stay away from stress
- problem and it effects many people
* major problem in the United States
- lives of college students
- that exists in everybody
* makes sleep more difficult for many people.
* manifests itself in a number of ways
- the form of muscular tension and hormonal imbalances
* measure of the internal force an object is experiencing per unit cross sectional area
- load carried across some area of material
- mismatch between the two kinds of distance
* medical term that describes how the human body reacts when it fears it is under attack.
* mental and hormonal response to the pressure of outside events or internal problems
* mental, physical and behavioral response to a variety of stimuli.
* mentally or emotionally disruptive or disquieting influence.
* mind state.
* monster that attacks every part of the body.
* natural and normal part of children s lives
- aspect of the sound of individual words
- biological response to unusual demands
- consequence of human interaction
* natural part of day to day living
- going to college, of studying, of taking exams, of writing papers
- the work environment
* natural reaction to everyday challenges and changes
* natural response to an event with uncertain results
- upsetting situations and events
* natural, often stimulating part of anyone's existence
- unavoidable part of life
* naturally increases sodium retention.
* neglected factor in addressing weight loss.
* non specific demand on the body by positive and negative forces.
* normal part of being alive
- every living thing 's daily life
- everyday living and helps make life interesting and meaningful
* normal part of life and all situations, both positive and negative
- at home or on the job
- our everyday life
* normal reaction to an abnormal situation
- life for people of all ages
- the demands of infertility
* normalized elongation.
* number of normal reactions for self-preservation.
* occur at the interface between the ceramic and the bond coat.
* occurs in many forms.
* occurs when a non-specific response is made upon the body
- bad things happen, as well happy things
- parts of an object slide by one another
* occurs when the demands in our lives exceed our resources
- of our environment appear to exceed our potential resources
- whenever there is change
* often accompanies the feeling of being out of control
- affects hormone levels
- begins with events beyond one's control
* often causes back and neck pain
- eating to go out of whack
- comes from a mismatch between expectations and achievement
- hides behind a mask of excess activity
- increases the occurrence of nitrate problems
- influences eating habits
* often is accompanied by an array of physical reactions
- depression , anxiety , insomnia
- leads people to do stupid things
- manifests itself in headaches, cramps, back pain, and physical tension
- occurs when demands exceed our perceived resources
- produces irritability and negativity
- results in disturbed sleep patterns and a lack of restful sleep
- shows in bad posture and muscular tension in shoulders, neck and back
- triggers depression, and common component of everyday life
* overwhelms the adrenal glands, which become imbalanced electrically.
* part of all of our lives
- our lives, be it at home or the workplace
- everyday work and personal life
- everyone's life, no matter what people think
* part of life in law enforcement
- that is unavoidable
* part of life, and everyone learns how to manage it or suffers the consequences
- but there are ways to cope with it
- our every day life
- the human experience
* perceived substantial imbalance between demand and response consequences.
* person s physical and emotional response to change.
* person's reaction to something considered a challenge or a threat.
* pervasive twentieth century phenomena, a frequent companion to nurses.
* physical condition.
* physical, mental or emotional tension.
* placed on the kidneys produces many allergies and toximia in the physical body.
* plays a key role in causing emaciation.
* plays a major role in many diseases
- most of our lives
- part in some physical problems , like heart disease
* plays a role in the way a person uses vision
- worsening a number of skin conditions, including acne, hives and psoriasis
- an important role in cardiac disease
* points The biggest trigger for eating disorders is stress.
* popular explanation for illness in North America.
* potential barrier to self-belief and realising our inner power
- risk factor for the onset of heart disease
* powerful word that affects our lives dramatically.
* presence in every aspect of college living.
* primary cause of overeating and weight gain.
* problem that everybody faces, especially college students.
* process that builds.
* produces a deflection or deformation in the material called strain
- adrenalin and endorphins which produce exhilaration to mask some of the stress
- and aggravates duodenal ulcer in any situation
- cortisol which has shown to damage the hippocamus
- erratic vibrations that lead to disharmony, followed by injury and disease
* produces hormones that cause glucose levels to skyrocket
- screw up our immune and enzyme systems
- intricate biochemical changes in the body
- strain , the actual deformation
* product of needing to control.
* promotes the release of steroids, which inhibit new cell development in the hippocampus.
* proven trigger of herpes outbreaks.
* pulls Calcium directly of the calcium reserves.
* raises cortisol levels.
* reaction to a perceived threat
- any event in our lives
- fear of the unknown
* real deterrent to learning.
* reduces memory and interferes with immune function by affecting stress hormones
- the function of the immune system and relaxation reduces stress
* refers to any or all the various pressures experienced in life
- physical and mental strain felt about a situation or an event
* related to physical illness is connected to depression
- toilet training can contribute to constipation in young children
* releases a series of complex changes in the body
- aging free radicals that damage delicate cells and trigger premature aging
- many negative energies within and out of the body
* relieve The heat treating of springs at a temperature so as to relieve stresses.
* remains the number one injury in the workplace.
* renders the body susceptible to all disease.
* represents a period of economic hardship.
* resistance to living in the present moment.
* response of the body to a variety of internal and external stimuli
- or reaction to change
* response to a situation, rather than the situation itself
* restrictive, confining emotion and it interferes with proper nerve function.
* result of brain waves operating at a higher frequency
- positive and negative experiences
* retardant to the immune system.
* risk factor for heart disease.
* robs many people of sleep.
* robs the body of magnesium
- brain of blood by tightening and shrinking arteries
- mind s ability to focus on the things in life that bring pleasure and contentment
* satisfy equilibrium equations.
* seems to affect ovulation.
* seems to be a major factor in triggering herpes recurrences
- motivator of laminitis
- particularly harmful in older people who endure chronic stress
- deplete the brain of serotonin
- exacerbate asthma in people who have the lung condition
- have an effect on the severity and frequency of the symptoms
* serious factor in perception and expression.
* sets off an alarm in the brain, which responds by preparing the body for defensive action.
* settles in the body for numerous reasons.
* signal that something needs to change.
* sometimes brings on a condition known as G.I. Stasis in which bunnies stop eating altogether.
* somewhat cyclical trap that serves to create more stress while it perpetuates struggle.
* source of energy that can be directed towards useful purposes.
* stimulates production of adrenal hormones which interfere with the normal ovulatory cycle.
* suppresses the immune system, predisposing to illness
* takes a toll on our health and quality of life
- on many forms
* tends to bring on changes in personalities
- increase during periods of rapid change
* term used to describe the body and mind's reaction to everyday tensions and pressures.
* too frequent source of back pain, because it makes the muscles tense.
* trigger for many headaches.
* triggers an adrenaline surge and makes our muscles tense and our heart race.
* triggers the fight or flight response within the body
- sympathetic nervous system which inhibits all enzyme activity
* trouble that causes anxiety in a person.
* twisting force.
* uses energy.
* usually leads to frustration and frustration leads to violence
- means greater vulnerability to the common viruses that cause colds and flu
* way our bodies and minds react to life's difficult moments.
* weakens and causes damage to the nervous system
- any animals immune system and increases the possibility of developing an infection
- plants natural resistance
* weakens the digestive system hence, the response against inflammation is very small
* zaps the breath by increasing the tension in our bodies which decreases our breathing.
+ Chronic stress: Mental illnesses
* Stress is a normal part of every living thing's daily life. However, when stress becomes chronic, it can damage the body and the mind. An Updated Guide To Stress, Stress Related Diseases, and Coping. If this happens again and again, over a long period of time, it can change the way the brain works. These changes can damage working memory spatial memory, and decision-making skills. They can also increase aggression.
+ Stress (biology): Health :: Biology
* Stress' is a word used in biology and medicine to describe a number of reactions that can be seen in organisms. Stress can be physical or mental. The word 'stress' can describe a pressure or other force, like the pressure of a person's upper teeth on the lower teeth while chewing. For example, a stress fracture happens when there are repeated impacts on a bone.
* Stress happens every day, and it is part of every living thing's normal life. However, having too much stress can cause many different medical problems. Stress plays a part in some physical problems, like heart disease. Acute Stress Disorder and PTSD are mental illnesses that can happen when a person experiences something that is very stressful and terrifying, like a major accident or a war. With this type of illness, a person has physical symptoms that are caused by emotional stress, not by an actual physical illness.
+ Testicle, Description: Anatomy of the male reproductive system :: Glands
* There are other uses for the 'cremasteric reflex' apart from making the testicles the right temperature. Stress can also make the 'cremasteric reflex' work. If a male human or mammal gets into a fight, then its testicles are in danger. They automatically pull up close to the body. The 'cremasteric reflex' also happens during sexual intercourse.
+ Ulcer: diseases :: Dermatology
* Ulcers can be from substances that will burn skin or mucous membranes. When acid makes some stomach ulcers this is from burning by the acid. Ulcers can be from cancer. Ulcers can be from diseases of blood vessels. If not enough blood goes to a body part, it can get an ulcer. Stress can also sometimes cause ulcers. They are also noted to hurt a lot.
+ Young's modulus: Physics
* Young's modulus' is the measure of how much force is needed to stretch or compress a substance. Stress is the measure of a force in a certain area. Strain is the amount of the substance which is deformed. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Strip
* Some strip skunks infect with rabies.
* are artifacts
- lumber
- slips
* counts as a means of determining densities and habitat utilization patterns in lake fishes.
Threat
* Many threats exist to nesting turtles and hatchlings.
* also concentrates a person's attention on the immediate situation.
* are a form of intimidation and control
- violence
- way to apply psychological pressure
- declarations
- warning
* cause a desire to skateboards.
* danger or harm.
* is an expression of intention to hurt, destroy, or punish the victim or another
- one's intention to inflict injury
* play a central role in coercive strategies.<|endoftext|>### entity:
Tone
* are also in Yucatec and a few other Mayan languages
- an integral part of the Vietnamese language
- hues
- intervals
- pitch
- quality
- samples in digital form
- sound
* color's lightness or darkness.
* denotes normal temperature, normal structure, normal tension and normal vibration of nerves.
* includes staff lines.
* is an additional dimension to consonant and vowel
- any step as the color passes from a light to dark shade or vice-versa
- somewhat like stress in that it also is the rise and fall of the pitch throughout a word
* is the color or relative brightness of an object
- degree of lightness or darkness
- emotional attitude of writers toward their subject and audience
- lightness or darkness of a given color
- normal degree of nerve tension
- relative shade of gray in which objects appear on an aerial panchromatic photograph
- shift between waves sent out and the waves returning
* means the amount of tension in the muscles.
* quality of tension at rest that all muscles have.
* refers to the relative lightness or darkness of a color
- strength of grays between white and black
- type of sound stimulation used
* state of rhythm, harmony, and natural balance.
* variation from very light to very dark.
* vary from light to dark based on a person's genetics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Trait
* Many traits are a function of markers from both chromosomes
- controlled by many genes, each of which contributes a small amount to the phenotype
- determined by the function of more than one gene
* Many traits are inherited from parents and passed from parents to offspring through genes
- the result of what is in a person's DNA and what that person does with it
* Most traits are determined by the interaction of several genes
- located on the X chromosome
- produced by multiple genes
* Most traits exist for the benefit of the individual rather than for the good of the species
- in degree, indicating the cumulative action of several genes
* Some traits also change the eye color from black to red.
* Some traits are controlled by far more alleles
- multiple alleles, such as the ABO blood types in humans
- determined by the combined effect of more than one pair of genes
* Some traits are inherited and others result from interactions with the environment
- by mechanisms other than dominance and recessiveness
- polygenic meaning that they are controlled by more than one gene
- sex-linked, which means they are found on the sex chromosomes
- the product of many different alleles that occupy a specific gene locus
- have both genetic and environmental components that contribute to their expression
- require simultaneous mutations in two or more genes
* accumulate and transform organisms.
* allow an organism to survive and reproduce in the environment in which it lives.
* are attributes
- character states
- characteristics that are determined by segments of DNA called genes
* are inherited and passed on to the next generation
- by our parents
- part of personality
- passed down in families in different patterns
- personal characteristics
* are properties of individuals and vary within a population
- populations
- psychologically real phenomena
- qualities, features or other things that distinguish the organism
* are relatively enduring ways in which one individual differs from another
- permanent and enduring qualities that a person shows in most situations
- stable qualities in people that have continuous dimensions and quantitative differences
- the physical characteristics of an organism
- things like hair color, eye color, height, and weight
- usually ones where the details of the genetics are unknown
* can be physical like hair color or the shape and size of a plant leaf
- include things like hair color, tooth shape, beak shape, bone size, or muscle structure
* controlled by a single gene with more than two alleles are called multiple - traits
- alleles on sex chromosomes are sex-linked
- two or more genes are said to be polygenic traits
* effect the way people behave.
* explain behavior.
* influenced mainly by one gene usually have predictable patterns of inheritance.
* interact with situations to determine behavior.
* is an attribute
* refer to personality variables that correspond to coherent patterns of social behavior.
+ Natural selection, Sexual selection: Evolution :: Metaphors referring to nature
* It is a theory of Charles Darwin that certain evolutionary traits can be explained by competition 'within' a species. The Descent of Man and selection in relation to sex' John Murray, London It is usually males who fight each other. Traits selected by mate choice are called 'ornaments'.
+ Personality psychology, Different Perspectives of Personality Research
* Trait theory suggests that there are both traits and types within people that create the personality. Types are discontinuous categories that have qualitative differences. Traits are stable qualities in people that have continuous dimensions and quantitative differences. Examples of traits are things like fairness, intelligence, confidence, and helpfulness. Individual differences are reflected in the amount that a trait is seen. Within trait theory, there are many different approaches to how traits operate and to what extent. A Nomothetic view of traits suggests that traits are universal and it is possible to compare traits among individuals. It also states that individuals reflect a unique combination of traits, implying that while everyone has the same basic traits, not all individuals have the same levels of each trait.
+ Sexual selection: Evolutionary biology
* The Descent of Man and selection in relation to sex'. John Murray, London. It is usually males who fight each other. Traits selected by mate choice are called 'ornaments'. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entity:
Video
* also tends to harden colors, and shadows aren t black so much as washed black.
* are located in cabinets
- drawers
- mediums
- movies
- part of television
- recordings
- visual communication
* based instruction natural format for technical computer training.
* can convey sight, sound, motion, time, and space
- nurture the soul or ignite the flesh
* constantly changing medium.
* dynamic form of communication.
* generic term that can include any image or graphical data that changes with time.
* has the ability to transcend our minds to other places and times - past, present and future.
* includes all the processes used in the transmission of visual signals in film and television.
* involves the dimension of time.
* is an analog format, while a computer graphic uses discrete pixels
- analog, electronic, visual interpretation of our surroundings
- audio-visual medium
- easy way for someone to get into digital images
- data organized in time
- one of the most commonly used and least understood elements of modern computer games
* is one of the most powerful communication devices
- means of communication on the planet
* is the most powerful form of communication
- opposite of interactive media
* is used as a tool to gather, analyze, and report customer insight
- for exposure to dance performance as well as technique
* is used to demonstrate how to measure the enthalpy change of combustion
- refer to a video coming from a source other than the computer
- video, they say, regardless of the resolution or the frame rate
* linear medium like audio, unlike photography or film.
* medium to which many teachers, parents, and community members respond well.
* often has lower pixel density than graphics.
* practical and cost-effective method for communicating ideas.
* scaling technology resizes video input to fill the screen.
* social medium.
* sometimes refers to television and video recorder.
* stimulates intellectual curiosity and uses both visual and auditory senses.
Vinyl
* are like any other man-made compounds.
* is chemicals
- cold
- groups
* is located in cars
- houses
- pants
- record albums
- stores
- wallpaper
- made of polymers
- organic chemicals
- plastic
- solids
- synthetic fiber
* is used for car seats
- covering
- produce
- records
- wearing
* range in quality from low to very high, and are easy to clean.<|endoftext|>### entity:
Vocalization
* Most vocalizations occur during courting and nesting.
* Much vocalization occurs as new birds arrive and vie for favored perching positions.
* Some vocalizations are above the frequency range of the human ear.
* are an integral part of the cow-calf relationship
- just as important as markings when it comes to species recognition
- often contagious between individuals and are sometimes combined into sequences
* consist of a series of single, unbroken calls
- growls and cries
- rattles, screeches, growls, buzzes, and chirps
* continue to be important communication signals throughout life.
* depends entirely on the personality of the individual bird.
* have a critical role in the interaction, development and maintenance of pair bonds
- infrasonic frequency components
* helps falcons to communicate with each other.
* is also of great use to the ring-tailed lemur
- encouraged to increase oxygen capacity, relax the face, and to have fun
- primarily a social behavior for orcas
- secondary use of the respiratory tract
* is the main medium through which pandas communicate with each other
- way they communicate
- primary means of communication between members of the species
- process in which vocal sounds are produced
- used mostly in defensive situations
* key part of the mating rituals.
* occurs underwater for communication.
* usually have a later age of onset. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Entrance
* are access
- arrivals
* are located in caves
- stadiums
- theatres
- openings
- portals
* includes readsides
- sections
* is an approach
### entrance:
Archway
* are located in aqueducts
- schools
- used for support
* is an entrance
Doorway
* are entrances
- indoor space
* are located in airports
- bedrooms
- buildings
- castles
- homes
- libraries
- walls
- part of walls
* are used for closing doors
- entries
- opening doors
- safety
* form the links between manageable units of space.
* includes bases
- doorsteps
- readsides
* is an entrance
### entrance | encroachment:
Human encroachment
* can stress the pup and scare the mother and other adult seals away.
* is one of the most prominent reasons of grizzly endangerment.
### entrance | enrollment:
Continuous enrollment
* is attendance of one semester for each academic year.
* is enrollment during at least two of three successive semesters
- in both fall and spring semesters
Open enrollment
* is the chance to change to full dental coverage.
* means that petroleum professionals have access to an entire world of information.
Entree
* are courses
* are located in dinner
- plates
- part of dinner
- rights
* is an entrance<|endoftext|>### entrance:
Gateway
* allow data transfers across the various networks that constitute the Internet.
* are books
- collections of Internet resources arranged by subject
- computers and software which interface directly with two or more mail systems
- entrances
- more than portals that just point to information
- often normal computers that happen to have more than one network interface
- the first point of entry of a material flow into the environment
* are the key to bringing Internet telephony into the mainstream
- making Internet telephony work
- websites which contain links to other webpages<|endoftext|>### entrance:
Portal
* Many portals are directories of learning resources.
* I don't think portals would be appropriate here at this time. Portals are for organizing quality articles within a particular area of interest. Right now I don't think we have enough quality articles to fill any particular category.
* are very bad idea. I disagree with their inclusion on English Wikipedia, and disagree with them here.
* act as menus or tables of contents.
* are Web sites that act as gateways to the Internet
- are designed to be the entry point for Web surfers
- compile a wide variety of content, services, and links to other sites
- a protective devices that are put around Earth
- boundaries
- cavities
- channels to reach users
- collections of information of a similar type
- comprehensive information and service web sites
- doors with strange symbols on both sides
- gateways in cyberspace which usher the user to a particular site
* are gateways to a community of users, rich in content with e-commerce opportunities
- jumps, in a sense, from one space to another
- platforms for corporate information publishing
- special areas where another part of the world is displayed
- the communication tool that helps organizations be responsive and relevant to members
- very popular methods for promoting products and services
- video games
- websites that bring together related services
* differ in how they charge.
### entrance | portal:
Enterprise portal
* allow businesses to put their internal systems online.
* are the cornerstones of successful business networks.
Internet portal
* Internet Portals are hybrids containing links to both search engines and subject directories.
* cater to owners and agents providing free information.
* guide millions of users to their desired Web site.
Voice portal
* Most voice portals have content and services geared toward mobile users.
* enable consumers and enterprise users to access Internet-based data by phone.
* use voice-activated software to connect the Web and the telephone. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### entrance | portal:
Web portal
* Web Portals funnel more traffic to Internet sites than any other place.
* act as the entry to an organization's valuable information assets.
* allow the user to set their own preferences.
Wireless portal
* translate data from a Web page to a specific device.
* website that supports a user with a smart phone or alphanumeric pager.<|endoftext|>### entrance:
Registration
* are authorization
- bodies
- certificates
- entrances
* common sense approach to reducing the flow of illegal weapons.
* form of input.
* is an electronic process
- in the business of putting people in touch with other people
* is the moral equivalent of a poll tax for voting
- number of registered voters
- only means by which gun ownership can be effectively regulated
- process by which data sets are brought into alignment
* is the process of making a list or being enrolled in an existing list
- officially enrolling in courses
* procedure for documentation of ownership or title.
* refers to payment of fees.
* way of getting to know each other
- keeping track of breeding dogs and their pedigrees
+ Answerbag
* Registration is free.
### entrance | registration:
Image registration
* determines the relative orientation between two or more images.
* is an important step, for example, in tomography and medical imaging
- central to many of the challenges in brain imaging today
* key step in a great variety of biomedical imaging applications.<|endoftext|>Entry
* Entries are accounting.
* Entries have doors
- rectangular doors
* Entries includes readsides
- sections
+ City of Manchester Stadium, Parts of the Stadium: Football stadiums in England
* It is suspended from steel cables attached to eight towers. These provide access to the upper level of seating via spiral ramps. The areas without seating in each corner have movable louvres. This allows for air to move through the pitch. Entry is gained by contactless smart card rather than the usual manned turnstile. This system can admit up to 1,200 people per minute around all entrances. A service tunnel running under the stadium provides access for emergency vehicles. It allows the visiting team's bus to enter the stadium directly. Inside the stadium are six themed restaurants. Two of restaurants have views of the pitch.
+ List of religions: Religion-related lists
* This is a list of religions and spiritual traditions. Some entries are written more than once.
### entry:
Debit
* are entries.
* is an entry
### entry-level position:
Dietary manager
* Most dietary managers possess a high level of technical skill and expertise.
* is an entry-level position.
* work with both people and paperwork.
Environmental chemical
* Many environmental chemicals can also modify DNA bases.
* Many environmental chemicals exhibit estrogenic activity, both naturally occurring and man-made
* Some environmental chemicals pose risks to human health.
* tend to accumulate in meat fat. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Environmental group
* Most environmental groups oppose ecoterrorism tactics.
* Some environmental groups object to the grant of a legal right to pollute
- see China as an enemy of the environment
- thrive by attacking other environmentalists
- use extreme measures to get their point across
* allege the electromagnetic waves cause cancer.
* are interested in the reporting of annual hazardous waste trends.
* blame industrial economies for most forest destruction.
* have long opposed commercial logging
- no right to represent Indigenous People
* make a living by scaring people
- lots of money out of fear
* say grazing harms the threatened desert tortoise.
* see hemp as an alternative to trees for paper.
* support efforts to increase law enforcement.
* think they have public opinion on their side.
* use donations to live a life of luxury.
* wage legal campaign to stop pollution
- war with lawmakers on a daily basis, jockeying for a better world
* work in tandem with government agents to harass land owners.
### environmental polluters:
Hydrocarbon fuel
* are environmental polluters.
* burn in oxygen to produce carbon dioxide and water and release heat.
* reacts with oxygen from the air in such a way that electrical power is generated.
* used include methane, ethylene and acetylene.
Environmental quality
* function of development.
* includes physical and social environment.
* is compatible with economic growth
- essential to long-term economic development and community vitality
- one of the material dimensions of the standard of living<|endoftext|>### environmentally responsible practice:
Soil testing
* can confirm low phosphorus levels
- determine the nutrient needs of a soil and the right amount of fertilizer to apply
* good way to assess the nutrient status of the soil
- maintain good plant growth and fruit production
* helps gauge fertilizer needs, especially for phosphorus and potassium.
* is an environmentally responsible practice
- important component in an sustainable system
- integral part of the geotechnical process
- essential to profitable crop production
- extremely important in manure management
* is the best guide to soil fertility
- scientific method available to evaluate the nutritional status of the soil
* is the best way to determine application rates for lime and fertilizer
- the amount and kind of fertilizer needed
- first step in determining fertilizer requirements of a lawn
- major tool used in determining supplemental nutrient needs
* provides a means for determining lime and fertilizer rates.
* useful tool that can help ensure the efficient use of applied plant nutrients.
### environmentally safe:
Tree shelter
* Tree Shelters are ideal for helping to establish young trees.
* are environmentally safe.
* come in many shapes, sizes, and colors.
* do more than just protect the seedling from deer, mice, voles and rabbits.
* increase heights of planted northern red oaks.
* reduce temperatures, wind exposure, and sun exposure to transplants.
### environments:
Social environment
* Most social environments affect functions.
* are environments.
* is centred round human beings
- the stepping-stone to higher learning
* plays an important part in shaping attitudes.
* shape genetic influences on intelligence.
### enzyme inhibitors:
Numerous drug
* are enzyme inhibitors.
* can depress thyroid hormone concentrations.
### enzymes:
Nitrate reductase
* are enzymes.
* contains iron and molybdenum.
* is commercially available in a stabilized form
- used in the measurement of low levels of nitrate
Protein kinase
* are essential components of many signal transduction pathways
- key regulatory molecules that control many biological processes
- master switches in many of the human body's biological cascades
- widespread in the body
* can activate phosphorylase by adding phosphate.
* is enzymes
- proteins | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### enzymes:
Serine protease
* All serine proteases follow the same mechanism.
* Many serine proteases are self-digesting.
* form a covalent intermediate with their substrates.
* play critical roles in the physiology of blood.
Xanthine oxidase
* are enzymes.
* can generate nitric oxide from nitrate in ischaemia.
* generates nitric oxide from nitrates and nitrite in hypoxia.
* is an example of such an enzyme.<|endoftext|>### epidemiological fact:
Gender inequality
* Gender inequalities are a continuing feature of Muslim countries
- glaringly apparent and deeply ingrained in society
- continue to hamper economic growth and well-being
* equals economic profit for some.
* exists in all aspects of life and throughout a woman's life cycle.
* feature of both our societies.
* has tremendous implications for economic growth.
* is an epidemiological fact
- deeply entrenched in almost all society
- evident in virtually every country, rich or poor
- more prevalent in the middle classes and up
- most common in women dealing with poverty
- still prevalent
- visible in the low levels of welfare, education, health and economic status
- widespread in academe just as it is in other professions and occupations
* limits economic growth for entire countries.
* perpetuates poverty, poor health and rapid population growth.
* structural impediment to poverty elimination.<|endoftext|>Episode
* are broadcasts
- happening
- part of serials
- sections
* includes incidents.
* increase likelihood.
* is an occurrence
* occur over time.
* relate to conditions.
+ Cops (TV series): 1989 television series debuts :: 1980s American television series :: 1990s American television series :: 2000s American television series :: 2010s American television series :: American crime television series :: Police television series
* The show is broadcasted through Fox and has been shown in over 100 cities in the United States. Every episode is about twenty two minutes long.
+ Cowboy Bebop, Story
* Cowboy Bebop takes place in the year 2071. The members of the space ship Bebop travel through outer space trying to catch criminals. If they catch the criminals alive then they get a reward. If the criminals die, the cowboys get nothing. The criminals are called bounties. Most episodes are about catching a bounty. Some episodes are about the characters' pasts and lives. At the beginning there are two main heroes, Spike and Jet. Later they would meet with others. They had become the crew of the space ship Bebop. Other members of the Bebop are Faye, computer hacker Ed, and a dog named Ein.
+ Dadı, Other websites: Turkish television series
* All episodes are available online as streaming video.
+ Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide: Nickelodeon television series
* The show stars Devon Werkheiser as Ned Bigby, a student at James K. Polk Middle School. Every episode is a group of tips to surviving a school based activity. The show is part of Nick's Sunday lineup. It first aired on September 12, 2004. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equal opportunity employer:
Cohesion
* Describes how strongly a collection of parts belong together.
* allows water to flow freely without molecules separating, due to hydrogen bonding
- stick together
* also requires strong bonds of mutual trust, respect, and confidence.
* big European word for all sorts of things that have nothing to do with cohesion.
* causes water to fill the xylem pipeline completely and to resist any separation
- form a convex skin-like covering called surface tension
* contributes to the transport of water against gravity.
* is an equal opportunity employer
- caused by a difference in sex of formations
- forces
- given through the collective consciousness and collective memory
- sometimes difficult to understand and to develop
- the ability of molecules of the same kind to stick together
* is the attraction between two or more polarized molecules of the same substance
- of like molecules to one another
* is the attractive force between molecules of the same substance
- similar particles
- commitment of soldiers to each other
* is the degree of functional relatedness of processing elements with a single module
- help, commitment, and support family members provide for one another
- effect of hydrogen bonds holding the water molecules together
- glue that holds small units together
- mutual attraction of water molecules
- process of water molecules being joined together in chains
- property of water where water sticks to water
- usually smaller in liquids than in solids
- what makes a unit of military people work together for the common good
- willingness of the group to stay together
* looks at the degree to which a method accomplishes one conceptual task.
* matter of shared values.
* means something has the capacity to resist rupturing when placed under tension
- the water sticks to itself
* occurs throughout the lifetimes.
* plays a bigger role in space.
* property or characteristic of an individual module.
* refers to the fact that water sticks to itself very easily.<|endoftext|>### equal opportunity employer | cohesion:
Social cohesion
* can only come from consensus.
* depends on voluntary, gift work.
* involves a sense of mutual commitment among citizens.
* is about shared values, but it is also about re-distributional issues
- also in danger in developing countries
- when religion helps to strengthen the bonds among people
* needs values and some values simply work better than others.
* requires a population that is tolerant, literate and committed to civic communities.
* societal project which transcends all the institutions in a society.
Unit cohesion
* critical means of countering the natural friction generated by combat.
* is what can make or break a military unit.
### equal opportunity problem:
Relationship violence
* Relationship Violence is an umbrella term that includes both domestic and dating violence.
* can also end in murder.
* encompasses a range of physical, emotional, and sexual behaviors.
* is an equal opportunity problem.
* occurs equally in heterosexual and homosexual couples.
### equally rich:
Mammalian life
* diversifies, spreading into all major environments.
* includes the mouse-deer, porcupine and possibly elephants, too.
* is equally rich.
### equilibrium measure:
Water potential
* characterizes the potential energy of water in soil.
* indicates how tightly the water is held by the soil matrix.
* is an equilibrium measure
- highest when water liquid and lowest when water gas in air
- zero in an open system
* plays a key role in a plants nutrient uptake.
* quantitative measure of the binding energy of water in food.
### equinox:
Spring equinox
* Most spring equinoxes are part of springs.
* is an equinox
* time of renewal. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Equipment
* has limits
- loose screws
* includes cloak devices
- sections
* is an important part of scuba
- called moving when it makes a motion of a certain amplitude
- generally for assembly of electronic and biomedical devices and parts
* is located in garages
- space shuttles
- used for work
* is used to excavate, load or move dirt, gravel or other mate-rials
- meter refrigerant flow in air conditioning systems in automobiles
- treat many physical and mental disabilities
* plays a significant role in technical diving.
* refers to both capital and non-capital assets
- such hardware as automated machinery, robots, and conveyor lines
* uses electricity.
### equipment:
Apparatus
* includes sections.
* is body parts.
* is used for serve
- work<|endoftext|>### equipment | apparatus:
Aerator
* also save energy since less hot water is used.
* are apparatus
- hardy, floating plants
* help keep oxygen in the water and algae from growing on top of it.
* is apparatus
* keep areas of water open to provide oxygen for fish
- the water from freezing over
* reduce water use by mixing air with water while providing enough turbulence for washing.
* save water by mixing air with the water for a forceful flow using less water.
* work by either taking plugs out of the lawn, or spiking into it.
Burner
* Many burners have metal caps that can be removed for cleaning.
* Most burners have flames
- use electricity
* Some burners require the oils be placed in a small amount of water.
* are apparatus
- common in contact sports such as football, wrestling, and hockey
- heating elements
- located in ovens
* happen in only one arm at a time.
- less electricity
### equipment | apparatus | burner:
Gas burner
* Most gas burners consist of a metal tube with holes in it.
* Some gas burners have a blast tube, similar to an oil burner, but most use atmospheric burners.
* are burners.
Pilot light
* can ignite fumes, causing an explosion.
* is indicators.
Centrifuge
- electrical devices
- laboratory equipment
- machines
- the answer to problems with drying beds
* can separate water at much higher process rates than gravity settling
- simulate high acceleration conditions
* exert a very large shearing force on flocs as they enter the centrifuge bowl.
* increase the effect of gravity by spinning the manure at high speeds.
* separate the amebocyte blood cells from the useless plasma.
* usually remove the uncrystallized syrup.
Copier
* affect the environment in a number of ways.
* are also a large energy consumer
- genital organs of ideas
- located in offices
* are the largest single energy user in an office setting
- most energy-intensive type of office equipment
### equipment | apparatus | copier:
Fax
* are an everyday, quick and economical way to receive and give valuable information to clients
- for the high-speed transmission of data
* can travel on radio waves.
* good method for transmission of documents.
* is particularly important for global communications
- short for facsimile , which means exact copy
* transform printed matter into a complex series of dots, similar to a bit-mapped graphic image.
### equipment | apparatus | duplicator:
Digital duplicator
* are a convemient, low-cost copying solution.
* can also print in color. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | apparatus:
Heat pump
* Most heat pumps deliver conditioned air to the home using ductwork.
* Most heat pumps use a refrigeration cycle
- electric motors to provide energy
* are a much cleaner and more environmentally safe way of heating and cooling homes
- very efficient alternative to electric heat
- inefficient when the outside temperature is below freezing
- like conventional air conditioners except they also can provide heat in the winter
- mechanical devices
- most effective at saving energy when in the heating mode
- much better at pumping cool air
- refrigeration devices running backward
- safe because they are flameless and flueless
- sensitive to restricted air flow
- the fastest growing direct use application of geothermal power
- two to four times more efficient than other heating and cooling systems
* can also be a part of an integrated system that provides both cooling and heating
- be extremely efficient in their use of energy
- deliver heating at less than half the cost of electric furnaces
- extract heat from air, water, or the earth
- provide all the heat necessary even in the coldest weather
- significantly reduce primary energy use for building heating and cooling
* create no acidic condensate.
* deliver the same register temperature as forced air systems.
* give off no fumes or harmful products of combustion.
* have about the same life expectancy
- an electrically powered backup for especially cold days
- no soot, carbon or smoke to soil walls
* operate by moving or transferring heat, rather than creating it
- removing heat from outside air and transferring it to the conditioned space
- most efficiently when the thermostat remains the same
- quietly with no combustion rumble
* pull the heat or coolness out of the liquid and circulate it through the buildings.
* require work to take heat from a cold body and remove it to a warm body.
* utilize electricity to drive the motors and compressors.
+ Heat pump, How it works: Engineering
* Most heat pumps use electric motors to provide energy. Some heat pumps use heat energy, supplied by a flame or an electric heater.
* Most heat pumps use a refrigeration cycle. A refrigeration cycle uses a fluid which moves through tubes and carries the heat. The fluid is called a refrigerant. During the refrigeration cycle, the refrigerant changes from a liquid to a gas and back to a liquid.
Incubator
* are a red-hot trend in venture capital
- commercial organizations
- new tools for the economic development of research
* can play a key role in a company's success
- technically be any device that maintains a constant temperature
* includes sections
- thermostats
* is apparatus
### equipment | apparatus | incubator:
Business incubator
* accelerate the successful development of entrepreneurial companies.
* are a growth industry
- relatively new concept in economic development
- business assistance programs targeted to start-up and fledgling firms
- special centers created to nurture small companies
* provide centralized services and resources for start-up businesses.
* reduce the risk of small business failures. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | apparatus:
Nuclear reactor
* Every nuclear reactor produces enough plutonium to make a bomb, about every ten days.
* Many nuclear reactors use uranium as fuel to generate electricity.
* Most nuclear reactors are used to make electricity
- burn uranium and produce plutonium as a radioactive waste byproduct
* Most nuclear reactors convert energy
- nuclear energy
- generate power
* Most nuclear reactors use enrich uranium
- fission
- nuclear fission
* Most nuclear reactors are used to make electricity. In nuclear power plants heat from the reactor changes water into steam. The steam is then used to power electric turbines which make electricity. It is important to remember that the turbines do not change the temperature of the steam, or the amount of steam. Instead, the turbines take energy from the movement of the steam
* are apparatus
- devices in which the energy of nuclear reactions is converted to electricity
* are expensive to build but relatively cheap to operate
- good at making heat
- likely to have accidents with severe consequences for humanity
- mechanical devices
- neither clean nor safe
- nuclear materials
* can also run on Thorium fuel.
* change elements into other elements simply by adding neutrons to their nuclei.
* contain a radioactive form of the element uranium.
* cost a lot more to build and maintain than conventional power plants.
* do have deadly products that can contaminate areas they fall onto.
* fuelled with uranium automatically produce plutonium as a byproduct.
* have the potential to malfunction in a variety of ways.
* produce heat through the controlled chain reactions of nuclear fission
- large quantities of fission products
- plutonium where none existed before
- plutonium, and plutonium is terrible because it can be used to make bombs
* provide the technology to build nuclear bombs.
* require backup power to cool their cores and fuel pools after they are shut down
- power from the grid to pass coolant through the core
* run off huge bath beads
- on cheap uranium but nobody knows what to do with the radioactive waste
- fission, or the splitting of atoms, to produce energy
* use nuclear fission
- reactions to make heat and electricity
* utilize the process of fission.
+ Ionizing radiation: Nuclear physics
* Nuclear reactors are used to make electricity. They make a lot of radiation, but the reactors are built carefully to keep the radiation inside the reactor. But many people are afraid that if there were a problem with the reactor, radioactive material could escape into the environment, harming or killing many animals and people. Also, the parts of the reactor stay radioactive, and can kill people, for hundreds or thousands of years, so people are not sure where they can keep parts of old reactors safely away from people.
+ Nuclear reaction
* Nuclear reactions occur in the sun, in nuclear reactors, in particle accelerators, and in outer space. Other than radioactive decay, very few nuclear reactions occur on earth except in these special places. Nuclear reactors use nuclear reactions to make heat and electricity. Accelerators sometimes cause nuclear reactions to make radioactive materials. Particles from outer space cause nuclear reactions in earth's atmosphere that make air slightly radioactive.
Optical bench
* device for measuring the optical performance of lenses.
* is apparatus
### equipment | apparatus | pendulum:
Metronome
* are a good way to practice playing in time
- located in cabinets
* are located in music schools
- stores
- pianos
- machines
- pendulums
* are used for rhythms | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | apparatus:
Photocopier
* Some photocopiers use a of radioactive material to eliminate the static charge in sheets of paper.
* accept coins, bills, and debit cards.
* are a major source of ozone contamination indoors
- duplicators
- electronic devices
- expensive, as are computers and video cameras
* are located in libraries
- offices
* can be a powerful source of light.
* emit low levels of air-polluting chemicals.
* have a lot in common with laser printers.
* includes sections.
* try to reproduce something, but they can t.
Purifier
* are apparatus.
* can also kill bacteria.
* is apparatus
* use blasts of air to separate out bran from the other particles.
Reformer
* Some reformers prefer to retain taxes in order to take from the rich and give to the poor.
- disputants
- part of oil refineries
* processing natural gas, for example, tend to produce carbon dioxide.<|endoftext|>### equipment | apparatus:
Semaphore
* act as primitive objects which perform synchronizations of several sorts.
* are a concept to synchronize parallel task
- quite old approach to synchronize parallel tasks
- an operating system facility used to control waiting
- cool
- extremely efficient however, and are widely used
- locks
- names of shared resources that the server keeps track of
- perfect for letting threads keep track of each other
- simple and elegant and allow the solution of many interesting problems
- simpler and faster
- useful in limiting the number of threads a resource dispenser creates
* belong to the allocating process.
* can also solve the starvation problem.
* have their dangers
- three properties
* provide a means for one task to jog another
- method of blocked waiting
- solution to the mutual exclusion problem
- an efficient and general purpose mechanism for protecting critical regions
* solve the problem of lost wakeup calls.
* take a nonnegative integer value.
Separator
* also treat stormwater before discharge to storm drains.
* are either vertical or horizontal and either cylindrical or spherical in shape.
* remove heavy liquid loads and are effective on larger water droplets.
Spindle apparatus
* attaches tho chromosomes.
* is made of microtubules.
Submersible
* allow scientists to dive to the ocean floor but are much more costly than ROVs.
- usually smaller than submarines
- warships
* can only cover very short distances underwater and can only dive to certain depths.<|endoftext|>### equipment:
Artificial satellite
* are located in space shuttles
- man-made, such as weather satellites
- smaller, unmanned spacecraft
- too small to develop substantial tidal stresses
* can also be very bright depending on how much sunlight they reflect.
* is equipment
* orbit the earth at altitudes between one hundred and several thousand miles.
* serve multiple purposes nowadays.
* stay in space for varying lengths of time.
+ Spacecraft, Satellites
* Some of the most important spacecraft today are artificial satellites. Artificial satellites are smaller, unmanned spacecraft. Some go into Low Earth orbit to look at the Earth or for other purposes. Others are sent to geostationary orbit to relay radio signals from one part of Earth to another, or to watch events on Earth from a high point of view. Communications satellites are important for television and other communications, and other satellites help with weather prediction and other jobs. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment:
Ball
* Most balls have diameters
- kg mass
* Some balls have energy
- kinetic energy
- mechanical energy
* are agglomeration.
* are capable of bounce
- pop
- roll
- toys
- celebration
- circulars
- dances
- for making ceramic bearings, pumps and valves and forming tools
- formal social events
- game play
* are located in baseball fields
- games
- basketball courts
- beachs
- closets
- gyms
- holes
- parks
- playgrounds
- pool tables
- sacks
- soccer fields
- sporting events
- sports
- streets
* are located in toy boxs
- stores
- made of plastic
- one half inch diameter models of the living world
- part of hands
- parties
- pitch
- social gathering
- software
- spheres
- structures
* are used for bearings
- bouncing
- bowling
- catchings
- hitting
- kicking
- playing games
- rollings
- tennis
- throwings
- video games
* bearing spindle motors comprise the majority of disk drives on the market today.
* bearings in a recirculating track reduce friction between the worm gear and the block.
* can grow or shrink to any size.
* come in several sizes and colors.
* fly shorter distances through cold air than through warm air.
- momentum
* is bottom part of torso
- exclusively an ornamental company, and floriculture large and fast-growing field
* is made of odorless, tasteless, non-toxic material
- up of an unknown substance that fell to earth thousands of years ago
* kiss when they touch each other.
* trays for ball storage between games and covers to keep table dust free and clean.
+ Bean machine: Engineering
* The machine consists of a vertical board with interleaved rows of pins. Balls are dropped from the top, and bounce left and right as they hit the pins. The height of ball columns in the bins approximates a bell curve.
+ Squash (sport), Playing equipment, The ball: Racquet sports
* The ball is made of rubber. It is hollow. When it is warm it bounces more. Balls are marked with different coloured dots. They are made to bounce at different speeds depending on the colour of the dots. Balls with yellow dots are slow. Balls with green or white dots are average. Balls with red dots are fast.
### equipment | ball:
Bowling ball
* are balls
- used for bowling
* come in one size and shape.
* do have a degree of hook potential.
* range in weight from six to sixteen pounds.
Coal ball
* Most coal balls contain a mixture of plant parts from many taxa.
* are in coal seams across North America and Eurasia. North American coal balls are in more places than in Europe. The oldest coal balls were found in Germany and former Czechoslovakia
- calcareous concretions that can disrupt the mining of bituminous coal bearing strata
- one of the best sources of anatomical information on Carboniferous plants
Fireball
* Many fireballs change colour as they descend and slow down.
* Some fireballs appear to be more dangerous to human life than others.
* are animes
- especially bright meteors
- typically half that size
- very bright meteors that can cast shadows on the ground
* can be green, yellow, orange, blue, red, as well as brilliant white
- so bright that they cast shadows
Golf ball
* Some golf balls have honey at their center.
* are a staple of holiday shopping
- golf equipment
* come in different types for different types of players.
* have dimples and grooves, tennis balls have hair, etc
- little dents all over the surface
* is golf equipment
### equipment | ball | handball:
Team handball
* fast-paced game that combines elements of basketball, soccer and water polo.
* is played by two teams of seven players each
- with seven players per side, six court players, and one goalkeeper
Moth ball
* are example of a slow- releasing fumigant agent
- extremely toxic
- located in trunks
- poisenous to chidren and can be deadly
* can stick to plastic and damage fabric. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | ball:
Mothball
* Put clothes in cedar chests, or place cedar chips around clothes.
* Some mothballs contain potential carcinogens, and all kinds pollute the air.
* are a common example of a solid which sublimes into gaseous, odor- producing molecules
- formulated as solids
* can cause nausea, vomiting and headache
- emit a gas that can damage many dolls
* slowly turn from solids to toxic vapor.
Seed ball
* are a small universe in themselves
- an effective way to re-establish native vegetation in burned areas
* can contain wild habitats, gardens, edible landscapes, orchards and farms.
Soccer ball
* Most soccer balls require between four and nine pounds of air.
* are balls.
* are located in fields
- lawns
- made of leathers
* come in different sizes according to age.
* take high bounces off the ground and players fall hard on it.
Softball
* are balls
- baseball
- flowers
- games
- sports
- team sports
* includes sections.
* starts around the same time as baseball.
* teaches judgement of trajectory.
Tennis ball
* are balls
- located in cans
- rounds
- spheres
- sports equipment
- still too big to figure out the shape of the object they hit
* are used for bouncing
- hitting
* are used for playing games
- recreation
- very, very hard on dog's teeth
* can become lodged in the throat.
* get their fuzz from recycled plastic. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment:
Camera
* Many cameras have a combination of optical and digital zoom
- input and output ports, into which video and audio cables can be attached
- leak light when their foam light seals deteriorate
- provide both optical and digital zoom
- rely on the screen as the sole viewfinder
* Many cameras use four AA batteries
- smaller sensors
* Most cameras connect directly to a desktop or notebook computer
- develop defective pixels as they age
- feature some kind of zoom lens
* Most cameras have a built-in light exposure meter that is used to determine the correct exposure
- shutter that enables the user to temporarily block video transmission
- table on the lens that indicates depth of field for different lens settings
- lenses
- optical finders that are just like the ones found in film cameras
- their focus point in the middle of the viewfinder
- operate on AA batteries
- provide auto-focusing and exposure controls based on the entire image
- use AA batteries, of which there are several types
* Most cameras use a removable memory device of some type
- single CCD chip to capture and transmit image information
- an averge of all of the light that falls on the frame of the camera
- memory cards
* Some cameras accept AA alkaline and AA rechargeable batteries
- allow for recharging while they are in the camera
* Some cameras automatically adjust exposure for the lightest area
- turn on the flash in dim light
- avoid red eye effects by using the pre-flash function of many flashes
- carry an infrared focusing mark on the lens focusing ring
* Some cameras come with rechargeable batteries
- universal DC voltage in connections
- fail to stay focused on objects in the sky
- fire a series of preflashes to shrink the subject's pupils and reduce red-eye
* Some cameras have a built-in flash, while others have a flash shoe for holding a flash accessory
- mode that sort of electronic motor drive
- separate button that locks the focus until a picture has been taken
- user-programmable mode that's held in memory
- an 'aperture ring'
- both internal and removable memory
- different names in different areas of the world
- internal non-removable storage
- manual controls for audio input, while others do it automatically
- no LCD panel, and instead use a simple optical viewfinder
- one aspect ratio for the image sensor and another for the viewfinder
* Some cameras have the ability to turn off antiblooming
- capacity to take very short video clips and some can even capture sound
- offer both optical and digital zooms
- process their signals more slowly than others
- record a digital image
- rely on a sensor on the flash itself
* Some cameras store the collected information in internal memory
- photos on removable memory disks that plug into a computer for downloading
- use their own proprietary format to store images
* also allow parents to monitor their children on the Internet
- record ghostly energy as orbs and other oddities, called anomalies
* angles, lighting and character placement can affect the perception of a story.
* are devices.
* are located in cabinets
- drawers
- suitcases
- precision machinery
- smaller and easier to hide
* are used for photographs
- pictures
* can collect energy from the emitted beams, showing areas of increased or decreased activity
- theoretically move along any dimension in three-dimensional space
* capture images.
* come in all shapes and sizes.
* control the amount of light taken in a picture by two basic ways.
* have depth
- flashs
- ranges
* includes aperture
- camera lenses
- lens hoods
- sprockets
* is photographic equipment
* like to fall on exposed lenses.
* make ghosts out of people.
* mean less privacy in public places, but most people prefer more safety.
* see light as it is reflected from an object.
* take photographs
* tells all Visible light is just a tiny portion of the total electromagnetic spectrum.
* use a lens to collect light and make a picture on the surface of the film
- light rays to deposit a representation of visible objects onto a surface
* utilize the reflected light, or light coming off the subject, for metering purposes.
* vary widely in optical quality and features
- resolution, accuracy, speed and price
* work by projecting images onto a flat piece of film.
+ Photography, Camera
* Some cameras have an 'aperture ring'. The aperture ring is behind the lens, but in front of the shutter. The purpose of the aperture ring is to control how much light enters the camera box. The aperture ring is a flat circle with a small hole in the centre. The small hole is called the 'aperture'. The size of the aperture can be changed.
+ Wide-angle lens: Camera lenses
* This is different for digital photography. Many cameras use smaller sensors. This means that the focal lengths have an angle of view that is different. That way, an 18mm lens mounted on a digital camera of this type gives an angle of view of the 28mm wide-angle lens, namely 75 degrees, for a multiplier of 1.5. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | camera:
Autofocus camera
* focus automatically when the shutter release is pressed
- on whatever is in the center of the viewfinder
* seem to insist on focusing on branches rather than the object of our attention.
+ Photography, Taking a photograph
* The most important thing when taking a photograph is focusing the lens. If the lens does not focus the picture well, the photograph will be blurry. Autofocus cameras focus automatically when the shutter release is pressed.<|endoftext|>### equipment | camera:
Camcorder
* Many camcorders also have the ability to digitally amplify the optical image.
* Most camcorders use nickel-cadmium batteries
- utilize small, light batteries
* Some camcorders come with built-in light for recording in dim conditions.
* Some camcorders have special sensors that turn the camera on in the presence of movement or sound
- wind filters or are recessed for decreasing the wind noise
* are located in sporting events
- similar to audio tape recorders, but they tend to make the subject extremely nervous
- television cameras
- video cameras
* use rectangular pixels because TV displays are rectangular. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | camera:
Digital camera
* All digital cameras consume a lot of energy and a lot of batteries
- have auto-focus
* Many digital cameras are like low-cost film cameras when it comes to the lens.
* Many digital cameras come with an LCD
- software for cropping and rotating snaps
- provide adjustable resolution and file compression settings
* Many digital cameras use an aperture that is variable
- standardized removable memory cards
* Most digital cameras are mega-pixel models that create images with a million or more pixels
- similar to point and shoot cameras
- small enough to fit in a purse, and many can fit in a pocket
- can serve as Video cameras
- come with a built-in flash
* Most digital cameras come with an LCD display on the back of the camera
- electronic flash unit built in to their body
- image-enhancing software
- software to edit and manage the image files created by the camera
- compress the image
- contain an energy buffer that safeguards against memory deletion
* Most digital cameras have a built-in flash
- an optical view finder
- at least low, medium, and high modes
- fully automatic operation
- zoom lenses
- run at one full image every few seconds
- save images to a removable memory card
* Most digital cameras use flash memory cards to store the images that are taken
- good quality optical glass
- the gray card to balance their colors
* Some digital cameras allow manual control of aperture and shutter speed.
* Some digital cameras are capable of taking pictures at variable resolutions
- notorious for taking pictures that are a little too dark
- come with a lightweight protective case
- employ a combination of electrical and mechanical shutters
* Some digital cameras have a non-removable memory chip embedded within the camera for storing images
- what is know as digital zoom
- look like ordinary cameras
- use multiple CCDs to capture red, green and blue values
* allow people to take pictures.
* are a reality for consumer and professional use
- electronic devices
- generally compact, but only a couple are pocket sized
- hot for every age
* are ideal for making quick photographs for the Web
- taking panoramic images
- in much demand as simple hunting-like tools for gathering images
- notorious for eating lots of power
- one area of consumer electronics that are particularly difficult to design
- similar to computers in that the amount of memory is very important
- small, fast and convenient and are decreasing in cost
- terrific, too, for capturing pictures as data
- very expensive
* built-in exposure meters try to balance the image exposure to produce a medium value.
* capture razor-sharp images and shoot video, too.
* do have their drawbacks.
* don t handle contrast as well as conventional film.
* eat batteries alive
- batteries, even rechargeables
* enable people to transmit family pictures over the Internet in the blink of an eye.
* have LCD displays, like miniature television screens
- a tendency to over-saturate colors
- an LCD screen as the viewfinder
- applications in both the consumer and business market
- tremendous applications for communicators
* measure resolution in pixels, a point of colored light.
* offer a film-free way to post images directly after they're taken.
* operate very well without artificial light.
* produce images that approach the quality of film.
* provide digital pictures
- instant pictures that download to a computer and viewed in a heartbeat
* require storage disks, or downloading onto parent computers.
* save digitized images in a memory cache, rather than on film
- images on internal memory chips or on floppy disks instead of on film
* tend to be more complex in their operation than analog cameras.
* use alkaline batteries at a shockingly fast rate
- batteries at an alarming rate
- color wheels or color matrix CCDs to capture color information in the image
- computer memory instead of film to hold their images
* use light-sensitive chips to capture their images
- electronic sensors in place of film
- many different file formats
- memory flash cards to store images
- other storage media for the images
- outside sources of light
- significantly more power than traditional cameras
* work best on still images
- differently than traditional camcorders
+ Metadata: Computer science :: Photography
* Digital cameras allow people to take pictures. Some cameras, espcially camera phones, have GPS and can include the location in metadata.
* Most digital cameras can serve as Video cameras. Some have a direct link to another computer where the data may be stored. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | camera | digital camera:
Webcam
* Most Webcams update pictures in set time intervals or as set by the camera's owner
- webcams provide still images from locations around the world
* There are an increasing number of live webcams around the world.
* are cameras
- cheap, and they capture pictures easily
- input devices
- liminal agents, spores of geography in a placeless realm
- live Internet-connected cameras
- one of the fastest growing features on the Internet
* are video cameras that are connected to the Internet
- feed live photographs onto the Web
* are video cameras which feed video onto the Internet
- stream a live video feed to a computer
* represent global information without the luxury of the most sophisticated technology.
+ Video camera, Uses: Cameras :: Electronics :: Data input
Infrared camera
* allow the researchers to monitor patients in total darkness.
* are especially useful in quality control applications.
* operate in one of two transmission windows in the atmosphere.
Modern camera
* are now very sensitive and work well in low light situations.
* have highly complex electronics.
* use solid state devices that do essentially the same thing.
Pinhole camera
* Many pinhole cameras employ the use of film holders so multiple exposures can be made on location.
* are small or large, improvised or designed with great care.
* can be small or large.
* have no lens, just a tiny opening which lets in enough light to make a picture.
Security camera
* are a relatively expensive way of solving rather than preventing such crimes.
* are located in casinos
- stores
Stereo camera
* produce images that seem to have depth.
* track the fly's movement in three dimensions.
Underwater camera
* Most underwater cameras take pictures.
* assist in researching structure.
* excel in clear water.
View camera
* are the largest and most adjustable type of camera.
* tend to be large and heavy, and they require large and sturdy tripods.
Electrical equipment
* Most electrical equipment emits some kind of radio signal.
* Some electrical equipment operates at temperatures exceeding their thermal rating.
* are used for a number of purposes.
* generates heat.
* receives power through electrical conductors.<|endoftext|>### equipment:
Electronic equipment
* All electronic equipment generates radio waves, which interfere with other devices
- has a finite life-span
* Most electronic equipment has a remote control
- operates on DC power, at relatively low voltages
* Some electronic equipment is highly susceptible to fluctuations or failures in electrical power.
* contains tiny microprocessors that keep track of time.
* is equipment
- manufactured using a mix of materials such as metals, plastics, and glass
* is used to extend the sound space
- facilitate the learning of conversational skills
- very vulnerable to power surges
* suffers ill effects from humidity.<|endoftext|>### equipment | electronic equipment:
Amplifier
* are electronic equipment.
* are part of radio receivers
- stereos
- the tiny components in hearing aids that make voices sound louder
* boost signal strength on broadband networks.
* is electronic equipment
+ Amplifier, How it works: Electronic musical instruments :: Electronics :: Audio technology
* When an amplifier tries to make the sound louder than it can, it adds distortion to the sound. Some amplifiers are made to add controlled distortion. Distortion from transistors sounds different than distortion from tubes. Distortion from tubes is often said to be more musical. Because of all this, more expensive amplifiers often add controlled distortion with tubes.
### equipment | electronic equipment | amplifier:
Differential amplifier
* comprise the first stage of most op amps.
* preserve the balance of the input signal. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | electronic equipment | amplifier:
Electronic amplifier
* have to be connected to electrical current or a battery to work.
* Electronic amplifiers make a signal from the radio or electric instrument louder and stronger by using transistors or vacuum tubes. Electronic amplifiers have to be connected to electrical current or a battery to work. Once the signal from the radio or electric instrument has been made louder and stronger, the signal needs to be connected to a loudspeaker so that people can hear it.
Maser
* are amplifiers
- atomic clocks which have outstanding short-term stability
- similar devices for microwaves
- the radio equivalent of lasers
* arise naturally in space, in clouds of warm dust and gas.
* is an amplifier
Optical amplifier
* Most optical amplifiers are limited to one or a few restricted frequency bands.
* are devices that can be used instead of repeaters in long-haul fibre links.
* can handle various bit rates and modulation formats.
* operate based on the stimulated emission process.
* use lasers to boost communications signals along a cable route.
Cassette player
* are electronic equipment.
* is electronic equipment
Equalizer
* are components
- scores
* increases or decreases the amplitude of a sound.
* performs the function of a logical gateway between the servers and the outside world.<|endoftext|>### equipment | electronic equipment:
Oscilloscope
* Most oscilloscopes are capable of displaying two different traces at the same time.
* are electronic equipment
- located in repair shops
* are part of cardiac monitors
- radar
- useful for showing how different types of signals look
* display a direct readout of the voltages and frequency of waveforms.
* generally have a limited number of channels.
* measure current and voltage and through the magic of mathematics calculate power.
* permit a visual examination of electrical phenomena.
* principally measure voltage and time.
* show sound waves.
Peripheral
* are electronic equipment
- part of computers
- parts added on to the computer to allow it to do special tasks
* is electronic equipment
* refer to all hardware accessories outside of the actual game console.
### equipment | electronic equipment | peripheral device:
Input device
* are machines that generate input for the computer
- things like the keyboard or mouse
* peripheral device
Output device
* are machines that display information from the computer
- peripherals
- things like the display, monitor, speakers, etc
* peripheral device
* process digital information using a variety of processing languages. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | electronic equipment | peripheral device:
Printer
* All printers work by laying down tiny dots of ink, toner or dye.
* Many printers use proprietary memory modules, as do most notebook computers
- tack cloths to clean off every sheet that needs cleaning
* Most printers are capable of printing on transparency film
- special graphic characters for line drawing
- dither to achieve various levels of gray or color
- have a thickness adjustment for printing on card stock and envelopes
* Some printers add all four colors to a plate before placing the image on paper
- also support a setting in which less toner is used to print a page image
- are multifunction, meaning they also copy, scan, or fax
- can use regular inks or photo inks
* Some printers have an infrared port for wireless printing
- multiple sets of fonts that have the same family name
- switches and other devices to change how they print
- mix colors to achieve black
- specialize in certain types of books only
- support printing on a wider variety of paper sizes than others
- try to print color as grey-scale at higher resolutions
- use hydrochloric acid to help the ferric oxalate dissolve
- work on tight schedules, with presses filled weeks ahead of time
* are a large and active group of businesses in the Northeast.
- complex, electromechanical devices
- linear devices
* are located in computers
- desks
- home offices
- print shops
- schools
- mechanical beasts in an electronic world
- of different types and include dot matrix, ink jet and laser printers
- peripherals
- skilled workers
* are the link between design and reality
- most common peripheral devices connected to parallel ports
- physical devices which generate output
* consume energy even while they are idling.
* desire paper.
* do different kinds of printing.
* emphasize the value of books as a time-saver and a necessity for the conduct of daily life.
* have memory just like a computer.
* measure paper in 'gsm', which stands for 'grams per square metre'.
* nightmare that occurs as the surface of a sheet lifts off during printing.
* produce paper copies of documents
- waste as part of the printing process
* speak a different language.
* type letters in ink or in Braille.
* use many different chemicals, machines, and processes.
* vary in size, speed, sophistication, and cost
- mainly in cost, quality, speed, and noise
+ Computer printer, Producing output
* Printers are programmed using a programming language. The printer interprets the program, and the outputs the result. A page description language describes what a page should look like. The program in a page description language is sent to the printer, which interprets them. Printer command languages are at a lower level than Page description languages, they contain information that is specific to the printer model.
+ Raster graphics: Computer graphics
* These languages are based on vectorized images, most of the time. To be printed, these images need to be translated into raster graphics first. This is done by a part called a Raster Image Processor. Most modern printers have those processors inside the printer. Some printers use a special piece of software on the computer to do that job.
### equipment | electronic equipment | peripheral device | printer:
Braille printer
* are significantly noisier than dot matrix or laser printers.
* convert text files into hard-copy braille.
* provide output for blind users.
Color printer
* Most color printers have three or four different color cartridges
- work on specially designed transparency film
* are very prevalent especially in the ink-jet technology category.
* can come very close to the quality of photographs.
* create color by mixing black, cyan, magenta and yellow.
* use the same networking components as their monochrome cousins. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | electronic equipment | peripheral device | printer:
Commercial printer
* Many commercial printers employ graphic designers to assist customers with their projects.
* Most commercial printers use the pantone matching system to describe ink colour.
Computer printer
* Most computer printers use ink systems that contain water-soluble dyes.
* are a razor-blade type of business
- computer hardware
- to be used to make one copy of a file
* use three methods for creating words and images on paper.
Photo printer
* Most photo printers can do more than just print photos on high-gloss paper.
* bring the functionality of a photolab to desktop and home computers.
Tape deck
* are electronic equipment
- part of stereos
* is electronic equipment
Exercise equipment
* Some exercise equipment contains materials that trigger allergic contact dermatitis.
* causes a startling number of injuries in children.
Fuel system
* Some fuel systems are part of aeroplanes
- aircraft
- airplanes
- automobiles
- cars
- jets
- motorbikes
* are equipment.
* are part of aircrafts
- motor vehicles
* components Identify the component parts and operation of boost pumps.
* is equipment
- used also as heat sink and to maintain aircraft trim<|endoftext|>### equipment:
Gear
* Some Gears have specialized systems for use in water and other environments.
* always work in pairs.
* are a form of the wheel and axle
- modified or special Wheel and Axle
- everywhere where there are engines and motors producing rotational motion
- very complex animals from a vibration standpoint
- wheels with teeth
* can also convert rotary motion to linear motion by meshing with a toothed bar called a rack
- change the direction of the rotating parts and can change the form of mechanical motion
- transfer effort from one place to another
* come in many shapes and sizes.
* common term used to refer to skydiving equipment in general.
* includes bases
- sections
* is devices
- located in cars
- mechanisms
- one of the nation's largest apparel manufacturers specializing in corporate fashions
- part of automobiles
- the government's strategy to increase bosses profits, or economic growth, as they call it
* make things move, and are an indispensible part of any mechanical device, real or imagined.
* refer to the chainrings on the front and the back.
* serve to increase or decrease torque.
* transfer torque and power and can provide the vehicle with changes in speed and direction.
* uses power.
### equipment | gear:
Bevel gear
* have a conical shape and transmit torque between perpendicular shafts.
* is gear
* transmit power at an angle, such as from the drive shaft to the rear-axle of a vehicle.
Bridle
* are devices
- mandatory on two year olds and older
- part of harnesses
- restraint
* includes reins
- sections
Corrective lens
* address two kinds of vision problems.
* are gear.
* can be either glasses or contact lenses.
* work by causing the light to focus directly on the retina.
Helical gear
* create axial thrust.
* have teeth that are set at an angle to the axle.
Overdrive gear
* decrease engine speed, reducing fuel consumption and engine wear.
* have the output shaft spinning faster than the input shaft.
Pinion
* are gear.
* tolerate drought and alkaline soil, but prefer loose, well-drained soils.
Rig
* are unique artificial reefs in that they extend vertically through the water column.
* consist of containers.
* includes sections.
### equipment | gear | rig:
Oil rig
* are located in sea.
* drill and remove hydrocarbons.
Scam
* are swindle.
* happen across the world.
* involving export of jewels occur in India , which target foreign citizens.
+ Crime in India, Crimes against foreigners, Passport theft: Crime by country :: India
* In India, stealing of passport of foreigners from luggage on trains and buses is widespread. Scams involving export of jewels occur in India, which target foreign citizens. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | gear | tackle:
Light tackle
* helps to detect soft bites, and perch are expert bait-stealers.
* is used to temporarily suspend the links until tension is applied.
Worm gear
* act like screws and provide a continuous motion.
* allow a large speed reduction and are used extensively in larger trucks.
* is gear
Heavy equipment
* is denoted by yellow paint, such as the dump trucks that plow snow in the winter
- located in construction sites
- often necessary to pile trees together so they can be burned
* is used to clear the land of trees and shrubs
- remove invasive, non-native plants
- stack and move containers in the containerized freight facilities
### equipment | mitt:
Oven mitt
* are essential when working with hot things
- located in kitchens
* have an occupational use as well. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment:
Modem
* Describe the operation of modems.
* Many modems have two jacks, one for the telephone line and one for a telephone handset.
* Most modems have special electronic components that do 'error correction'.
* Some modems are cards that fit into slots inside the computer
- emit a series of clicks when waiting for a dial tone, dialing, or waiting for an answer
- have both a phone and a line socket
- use data compression to achieve faster data throughput
* There are many types of communication software that can be used with modems.
* allow computers to communicate with one another via the telephone lines
- send and receive data over phone lines
- transmit information to one another via an ordinary telephone line
- data to be transmitted over voice-grade telephone lines
- for communication between computers at remote sites
- two computers literally to 'talk' back and forth to each other
* also convert analog signals from telephone lines into digital signals for computer use
- use changes in sound, to transmit digital data
* are a competitive market
- high speed, cheap and easy way to communicate with people and is very popular
- popular means to connect home computers to the internet
- switched technology, and the only analog technology in use today
- also an inefficient use of the telephone network
* are devices that connect the computer to a phone line
- let computers send data over phone lines
- use standard analog phone lines to transmit data
- which allow digital data signals to be transmitted across an analog link
- electronic equipment
- far more sensitive than human ears
- now an integral part of most office computers and many home computers
* are the basic device used to convert messages to and from different computers
- devices that let computers talk to each other over telephone lines
- primary way most computer users connect to outside networks such as the Internet
* can transmit computer information around the world.
* come in all sizes and shapes
- with the capacity to transfer information at various speeds
* connect computers over telephone lines.
* convert data into sound so that it can be sent through the phone system
- digital signals from a computer into analog signals in the telephone frequency range
* differ in the way they enable data compression.
* enable computers to be connected so they can exchange information
- transmit digital data over the Networks
* have a speed rating which measures how fast data can be communicated in bits per second
- problems
* includes circuits
- electron tubes
- resistors
- sections
- vacuum tubes
* is electronic equipment
* operate at frequencies outside the range of human hearing.
* rely on serial communication to send data over telephone lines.
* still account for the majority of Internet connections.
* tend to generate heat, which can cause flaws in the electronic components.
* translate computerized data into signals that travel through phone lines
- digital computer information into analog signals used over phone lines
* transmit information at various speeds known as baud rate.
* use IRQs to signal the computer that data has been received or sent
- different tones to represent different bits of data
* used in the dial-up telephone network have two wires, the same as a standard telephone set.
* vary in the speed with which they can transmit data between computer and internet.
* work on analog, or sound, signals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | modem:
Cable modem
* Most cable modems are external devices that connect to a personal computer.
* allow computers to talk over the cable television network.
* are a means of high speed Internet access via cable lines
- shared media
- small but fast-growing segment of the online world
* are a way of using the cable network to access the Internet
- to access the Internet using lines installed by the local cable company
- an increasingly popular means for PC's to attach at high speeds, to the Internet
* are devices that attach to the cable TV network connection in a home or office
- cable TV network connection in a residence
* are the cable companies' solution to high speed internet connectivity
- television companies' answer to high speed data access
* is one of many competing data communications interfaces to faster internet access.
* keep computers running without a phone line.
* represent the kind of monopoly that Internet providers fear in telephony.
* service that goes through a cable TV connection.
* work over coaxial cable television wiring provided by cable television companies.
+ Modem: Computer hardware :: Telecommunications
* Many modems are used to connect to the Internet through telephone service or cable television service. Faster telephone service is called DSL and is usually more than ten times faster. Cable modems connect through cable television, and are similarly fast. Most DSL and cable modems are internal.
Fax modem
* Most fax modems have two jacks, one for the cord that goes to the wall and one for a telephone.
* use a computer's internal processor.<|endoftext|>### equipment:
Mound
* Some mounds contain no eggs and are referred to as test redds, false redds, or scrapes.
* Some mounds use heat
- metabolic heat
* are also important in feedlots
- fill
- good places to use fumigants, since they are believed to mark deep runs or nest areas
* are located in countrysides
- deserts
- hell
- structures
* are used for baseball
- pitch
* built by fire ants in fields often interfere with mowing and farming operations.
* can stand alone or be in clusters of as many as twenty constructions
- vary in size, but the volcano shape is characteristic of a mole
* differ in shape and number.
* includes sections.
* interfere with mechanical cultivation, and discourage farm workers from entering fields.
* is baseball equipment
* occur when the minerals concentrate at the ground surface through evaporation.
* serve as protection against the extreme heat and flooding that occurs at ground level.
* stand alone and in clusters.
* vary from about the size of a golf ball to a basketball
- in shape, between and even within species
* vary in size, anywhere from that of a basketball to that of a golf ball
- from golf ball to basketball size
### equipment | mound:
Termite mound
* Some termite mounds use heat
* are marvels of engineering.
* can increase the robustness of dryland ecosystems to climatic change.
* vary a lot due to various species of termites
- in shape and size depending on the soil types and local climatic conditions
Parachute
* Some parachutes can take at least two days to pack.
* are attractive almost magnetic objects for children
- illegal because they are very dangerous
- large pieces of cloth
- the lifesaving equipment of aircrewman when they have to bail out
* includes hems
- sections
* is rescue equipment
### equipment | parachute:
Powered parachute
* Powered Parachutes are the fastest growing segment of the light aviation industry
- safest type of wing available
- very large with slow steering response times and large inertial movements
* are the easiest powered aircraft to pilot
- fastest growing segment of light aviation
### equipment | paraphernalia:
Fishing gear
* Some fishing gear is particularly deadly for certain animals in some situations.
* is gear. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment:
Peripheral equipment
* is that which can be added to the computer.
* is necessary for people to interact with a computer system. Some peripherals, such as touchscreens, work for both input and output.<|endoftext|>### equipment:
Phone
* Many phones can vibrate instead of ring
- have a little switch which can change between tone and pulse
* Most phones allow the entry of numbers for calling at the user's convenience
- user to switch back and forth between tone and pulse dialing
* Most phones have a timer that records the number of minutes used
- batteries
- cell batteries
- security features that block outgoing calls to certain numbers without a password
- use modular jacks
* Some phones can double as two-way radios or pagers.
* Some phones have a flash button that does the same thing
- tone or pulse button
- visual message waiting indicator, such as a flashing light
- buttons labeled flash and some fax machines have hook buttons
- displays on both the handset and base, some on just the base or just the handset
- use satellites
* are actual speech sounds as uttered by human beings
- capable of rings
- communication devices
- electrical devices
* are located in desktops
- houses
- motels
- offices
- rest areas
- made of plastic
- part of utterances
- telephones
- things that just work
- tools
* are used for calling
- communicating
- talking
* come in many colors from chrome to emerald to basic black
* have batteries
- different rings
- rechargeable batteries, as do many PDAs
* includes circuits
- electron tubes
- resistors
- sections
- telephone receivers
- vacuum tubes
* is electronic equipment
* keep shrinking in size and price.
* represent messages.
* use a very small bandwidth over a long period of time.
* usually ring in five-second cycles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | phone:
Cell phone
* Most cell phones are battery-operated.
* Most cell phones have a silent setting that vibrates rather than rings with an incoming call
- offer voice mail as a feature
- operate by sending signals to a nearby antenna
- use some variation requiring multiple key strokes per letter
* Some cell phones are flat, sort of like a deck of cards.
* Some cell phones have an infrared port can share an Internet connection with a Palm wirelessly
- the ability to send and receive e-mail also
- work with limited success
* allow business to be conducted while driving to and from appointments.
* are a common way for parents to remain in contact with children throughout the day
- growth industry
- very recent phenomena
* are also a quick method of communication between staff members
- source of convenience and safety for most people
- very common
* are an example of our increasing mobility in the information age
- individual's personal preference
- arguably one of the most successful consumer products of all time
- as much of a fashion statement today as any piece of jewelry or eyewear
- bad for children
- basically an accessory of necessity nowadays
* are common in Haiti
- place at business meetings and seminars
- different
- duplex
* are everywhere and cost less to use than in the States
- in Shanghai, Beijing, and other major cities
- extremely popular among teenagers
- far more widely used here than in the United States
- for the socially challenged
- less common because they're too expensive
- like little radios that communicate with towers scattered around our landscape
- line of sight devices with limited power for transmission
* are located in backpacks
- shelfs
- low bandwidth
- now ubiquitous
- of little use against hornets
- often the primary means for communicating with teens on the go and behind the wheel
* are one of the most intricate devices used by people on a daily basis
- way kids express their identity and communicate with one another
- portable telephones
* are the embodiment of convenience
- safest to use, during a thunderstorm
* are ubiquitous in Italy and have surpassed the number of regular telephones
- the big cities of Asia and Latin America
- widespread
- wireless phones
* are, bottom line, radios with a connection to a telephone company.
* can act as modems for our laptops.
* can be a danger for everyone driving on rural highways, including farmers
- lifesaver for many professionals
- become cameras or bar code readers
* can cause accidents in many ways
- gasoline pumps to explode
- keep people in touch when they are miles apart
- lose their signal connection in the mountains
- receive video and other moving images, for example
- send and receive hundreds of frequencies
* do give some people problems
- sometimes serve a higher purpose
- power buttons for a reason
- tiny yet audible speakers and microphones
* help a family keep in touch.
* make it possible to get a reservation or talk to family while driving down the road
- slaves of their owners, who are powerless to avoid annoying innocent bystanders
* operate on three different systems
- within cells , and they can switch cells as they move around
* produce powerful radio waves that literally microwave the user's brain.
* provide a connection to the outside world, although reception is spotty.
* take a driver's attention off the road and place the driver and other motorists at risk
- less then an hour to turn on
* use low power, while ovens use high power
- low-level microwave radiation to communicate between the caller and a base station
* use microwave signals to transmit data or human voices
- human voice or data
- the airwaves just like radio stations do, but they are considered private
* work as two-way radios
- by transmitting radio waves to base stations that plug calls into a network
- in some areas, especially high on cliffs
- on line of site signal
+ Mobile phone, Technology: Telephone :: Messaging
* Cell phones work as two-way radios. They send electromagnetic microwaves from base station to base station. The waves are sent through antennas. This is called wireless communication.
* Cell phones are now a big problem on the street. Before the problem was that people drove and talk with their cell phones. Today, people are so addict to their phones, that they text while driving. This distraction causes lots of accidents and sometimes it can kill. In Quebec there is one person on five that admit texting and driving at the same time. In summary, cell phones become more dangerous and on the street and people have to stop use their phone while driving. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | phone:
Digital phone
* All digital phones work both on digital and analog systems, so they are called dual-mode.
* Many digital phones have one-button access to automated voice mailboxes.
* are harder to monitor.
* are more efficient and have longer talk and standby time than analog phones
- likely to cause problems than analog phones
* consume less power than analog phones.
* offer greater protection against eavesdropping.
* send out pulsing energy.
Emergency phone
* Most emergency phones are red metal boxes with a push button.
* are the red phones located on each floor of the stacks.
Hand phone
* are usually more expensive than fixed line telephones.
* use either analog or digital technology.
Internet phone
* Most Internet phones use a roller to move a selection bar up and down the screen.
* are simply cell phones with a minibrowser.
* can also use other types of numbers.
* has the ability to connect countries in more ways then one.
* uses two computers and an internet connection.
Modern phone
* All modern phones use digital networks.
+ Mobile phone, Technology: Telephone :: Messaging
* Most of the older cell phones used analog networks. All modern phones use digital networks.
Portable phone
* add another dimension of safety for a elderly family member.
* can interfere with some electrical equipment.
* emit low levels of microwave radiation.
Public phone
* are common from which all calls can be dialled.
* operate by phone cards.
Satellite phone
* are sensitive to power requirements and weather
- the only reliable form of communication
- totally different than cellular service
* have their own area codes.
* mean contact on shore for weather routing and emergencies.<|endoftext|>### equipment | phone:
Smart phone
* are smaller than PDAs and are designed to make calls.
* can send and receive data much faster than older phones.
+ Mobile phone, Smartphones: Telephone :: Messaging
* Data communication has also become faster. Smart phones can send and receive data much faster than older phones. The industry uses different standards to label the data transmission rates. 2G was introduced in 1991. 2G means '2'nd 'G'eneration'. 3G was introduced in 2002. This is comparable to a DSL or low end cable modem speed.<|endoftext|>### equipment | phone:
Wireless phone
* Many wireless phones are dependant on satellites to bounce their signals.
* Most wireless phones are able to accommodate local ten-digit dialing
- can receive messages
* are already more widespread than desktop computers.
* are an important personal safety tool
- weapon in the war against domestic violence
- cheaper than personal computers and are almost always with the user
- convenient and often increase work efficiency
- everywhere
- small enough to fit in our pockets and purses
- the fastest growing consumer products in history
* can be analog or digital, depending on the type of transmission signal
- convenient items to own
* work by sending and receiving signals over radio waves.
### equipment | photographic equipment:
Light meter
* Many light meters serve as both reflective and incident meters.
* is an alternate term for exposure meter
- photographic equipment
* measure the quantity of light in our scene.
Photographic material
* All photographic materials require a solid base.
* Some photographic materials start fading only after a few years' time.
* are extremely vulnerable to the effects of residual chemicals
- hygroscopic, readily absorbing and releasing moisture
* based on photosensitivity are very sensitive to environmental conditions.
* is photographic equipment | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | photographic equipment:
Photographic photographic film
* A photographic film photographic material
* Photographic film is coated with a thin layer of silver chloride, silver bromide, or silver iodide
- an emulsion containing light-sensitive silver halide crystals
- chemicals that react when light shines on it
- made of cellulose acetate
* Photographic films are coated with different mineral salts
- located in suitcases
- more efficient at measuring more energetic photons
- usually more efficient when measuring more energetic photons
* Some photographic films are sensitive to ultraviolet energy, as are many electronic detectors.
+ Photography, Film
* The picture the lens makes is recorded on photographic film. Film is placed inside the camera box. Light coming through the lens, aperture and open shutter shines on the film. Photographic film is coated with chemicals that react when light shines on it. Letting light shine on the film is called 'exposing' the film.
Photometer
* are optical instruments that measure the intensity or brightness of light from a source.
* is photographic equipment
* provide neither pictures nor spectra.
* record the flux of light in a given range of wavelengths from a given part of the sky.<|endoftext|>### equipment | photographic equipment | photometer:
Spectrophotometer
* are especially useful for nutrient studies
- laboratory equipment
- located in chemistry labs
- photometers
* can also measure luminescence.
* commonly have a stored program for turbidity that has been factory-calibrated.
* measure reflectance or transmittance as a function of wavelength
- the intensity of a beam of light that exists in a sample
* merely absorb light.
* quantify optical absorber concentrations in optically clear media.
* require several minutes to perform the same task.
+ Spectrophotometer, Design: Spectroscopy
* Spectrophotometers can also measure luminescence. For example, the machine can shine ultraviolet light of one frequency on the sample. This will excite the sample and make it glow. The detectors can the measuring the light glowing from the sample at a different frequency.
Pinball machine
* are electrical devices
- mechanical devices
* is equipment
Protective equipment
* can prevent eye, head, face and mouth injuries.
* needs to be used when handling animals, especially trapped mammals.
Receiver
* are football players
- located near stock
- part of telephones
- sets
- tennis players
- transducers
* have sensors.
* includes aerials
- antennas
- bases
- circuits
- electron tubes
- resistors
- sections
- vacuum tubes
* use electrical energy
### equipment | receiver:
Television set
* Some television sets get very hot and are potential fire hazards.
* are communication devices
- everywhere
* are located in houses
- stores
- particularly dangerous during thunderstorms
* use the same principles as particle accelerators.
Tuner
* are electronic components
- expert systems that can make intelligent and instant decisions to improve performance
* are part of radios
- tv
- products
- skilled workers
Tv set
* are films.
* are located in garages
- solids<|endoftext|>### equipment:
Recorder
* Create beautiful sounds with flute-like instruments.
* are equipment
- flute-like instruments that are used to learn pitch, melody and harmony
- judges
* includes circuits
- the object that bridges the gap between the client code and the multimedia subsystem
* use microphones.
+ Recorder, Kinds of recorder: Flutes
* Recorders are made in different sizes. This is the note that is heard when the player covers all the finger holes and the thumb hole. The soprano recorder is the size of recorder which is usually played in schools, also known as a Descant. Some recorders are smaller than the soprano recorder but are not common. The alto recorder is bigger than the soprano recorder. Instruments larger than the bass are made but are not common. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | recorder:
Sound recorder
* simpe tool for recording and playing.WAV files.
* simple tool for recording and playing sound files.<|endoftext|>### equipment | recorder:
Tape recorder
* Most tape recorders use microphones.
* can record sound level and crowd response as well as conduct interviews
- store many different forms of information
* combine knowledge both on mechanics and electronics.
* have the ability to record exactly what happened for a few reasons.
* make some people squeamish.
+ Reel-to-reel tape recorders, Technical information: Magnetic tape
* This plastic tape is covered by a special magnetic substance which is being made into magnetic domains when it is being recorded. The tape recorder must have a record, playback and an erase head which transfer the signal onto the tape. The more expensive tape decks have three or six separate heads. Tape recorders combine knowledge both on mechanics and electronics. There must be very precise motors and moving parts, but also a complicated circuit board. It has to contain transistors, amplifiers etc.
Reel
* are an area of collectible fishing tackle that has received less attention than the lures
- dance music
- diving accessories for technical diving
- films
- square dances
- the plastic or metal reels the film is physically transferred to for projection
- winders
* includes sections. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment:
Satellite
* Explain why a satellite stays in orbit and define orbit parameters.
* Many satellites are in orbit around the Earth.
* Many satellites are visible to the naked eye
- with the naked eye or with the aid of binoculars
- function as orbiting bulletin boards, relaying packet messages around the world
- orbit each of the four giant planets
- use so-called spotting scopes to aim at the stars and keep the satellite positioned
* Most satellites have more than one antenna on- board
- surfaces
- too little gravity to retain an atmosphere
- operate in a geosynchronous orbit
- spin while they are in orbit
- stop functioning long before they fall to Earth
* Some satellites are low-powered and provide weak signals
- natural, like the moon, which natural satellite of the earth
- can divide their signal into many movable spot beams
* Some satellites carry detectors
- equipment to receive signals
- instruments
- telescopes
- ultraviolet telescopes
- collect over a terabyte worth of data each day
* Some satellites have a digital signal processor, which is like a very powerful computer
- dual modes that operate simultaneously
- sensors
- special cameras that can take pictures of the Earth
- water vapour sensors
- identify weather patterns and enhance weather predictions
- look out into space and record information about the galaxy
- revolve around the earth in elliptical orbits
* Some satellites send and receive telephone, fax, and computer communications
- television signals
* Some satellites use cameras
- film cameras
* actually remain in orbit about Earth because of gravity.
* allow fast transmission over immense distances with no loss of signal
- for the transformation of information in many forms
- measurements to be made over vast ocean areas on a daily basis
- meteorologists to see what the earth and clouds look like from space
* also can see into space better than telescopes at Earth's surface
- help correct errors due to the curvature of the Earth
- move in orbits at a wide variety of altitudes
- serve an important role as a redundant, or backup system, to fiber-optic cable
- slow their planets' rotation
* appear as a starlike dot moving across the sky in a straight line
- small, steady, extremely fast-moving points of light
* are a completely different breed of television services
- key component of almost every communication system
* are able to take pictures of our planet at night, as well as in daylight
- transmit information quickly from one part of the earth to another
- accurate because they have atomic clocks on board
- almost the only convenient way to monitor ice accumulations in the polar regions
* are also at risk during solar storms
- wireless systems that use RF to communicate
- an important component in true economy of scale
- celestial bodies
- devices that use sensors to observe Earth and our solar system
- electronic devices
- followers
- heavenly bodies
- laptop computers
* are located in orbits
- solar systems
- near planets
- most visible in the hours after sunset or before sunrise
- objects that orbit another object in space
- propelled by rockets to their orbits
* are sensitive to bad weather and sun spots
- the shock and vibration produced by rocket motors
- spacecrafts
- species
- the only technology that have economics independent of density
* are used for a large number of purposes
- spying
- useful for weather observation because they are at an ideal vantage point
* broadcasting television typically provide many gigabytes of bandwidth.
* can also lock into synchronous orbits and produce important effects
- be natural, like moons, or made by people
- cover large areas of the Earth
- detect volcanic eruptions and the motion of ash clouds
* can experience increased drag reducing the lifetime of their orbits
- drag, which reduces the lifetime of their orbits
* can measure cloud fraction over the entire atmosphere and for all types of clouds
- ocean surface temperatures shown in computer-generated colors
- observe the Earth's atmosphere, surface and oceans
- only view the upper few meters of the ocean's surface
- operate in several types of Earth orbit
- orbit the Earth several times in a day
- oversee the entire earth's surface on a periodical basis covering large areas
* can provide an image of the weather day or night, when sunlight is no longer available
- continuous communication coverage over most of the earth
- sometimes be damaged by particles from the sun, so there are hazards
* circle our globe in several types of orbits.
* circling the Earth can survey an entire Ocean in less than an hour.
* come in all shapes and sizes and play a variety of roles
- many shapes and sizes and have many uses
* do sometimes fall out of orbit due to space weather events.
* drift in a westerly direction
- out of position because of solar wind or gravitational or magnetic forces
* dwells over polar regions which change in longitude as the earth rotates.
* efficiently form heterochromatin, and heterochromatin silences genes.
* go from one end of the sky to the other in one steady direction.
* have four atomic clocks on board
* have the ability to transmit information virtually in an instant
- advantage of a bird's eye view of weather systems
- possibility of looking both at the Earth and at the Universe
- unique advantage of being able to cover large portions of the earth's surface
* having infrared channels, however, are capable of detecting hotspots, like fires.
* is equipment
* look at many different types of light emitted by an object.
* looking toward Earth provide information about clouds, oceans, land and ice.
* measure precipitation using visible, infrared and microwave channels.
* monitor weather patterns and human land use.
* move across the sky, and every year they multiply.
* now observe the sea surface temperature, winds, elevation and color
- play a role in everything from television to pagers to car navigation systems
* observe Earth systems from orbit.
* often loop around Earth or other planets to increase their speed
- operate in the space environment for many years
* operate above the atmosphere.
* orbit at several hundreds of miles above Earth
- the same speed as the earth's rotation therefore remaining in the same position
- the earth, making repeated visits to places
* orbiting the Earth provide more than a twinkle in the night sky
- use solar power
- earth can measure chlorophyll pigment and water temperature
* play a more and more important role in the development of the society.
* play an important role in providing atmospheric data over the oceans
- transmitting all sorts of data today
* provide an extensive cover of an ocean's surface
- continuous surveillance
- detail information
- images of the sea surface temperatures over the entire ocean
* provide more detail information
- national trunk services
- synchronous measurements of ocean temperature and vegetation conditions
* receive and retransmit electromagnetic signals.
* represent a platform for remote sensing.
* scan the earth, like huge orbiting eyes.
* seem to affect the structure of even tenuous rings like that found at Jupiter.
* send information as a microwave beam.
* sometimes experience increased drag, reducing their longevity.
* track across the Earth's surface, encompassed by their visibility circles.
* transmit a number of different types of images
- information and images immediately to and from every part of the world
- signals which are observed by ground based receivers
* travel faster along their orbital path when they are closest to the earth.
* travelling deep into space often carry additional nuclear power supplies.
* typically have some means of propulsion for orbit corrections.
* use a variety of light-sensitive sensors to determine their position
- wide variety of orbits to fullfil their missions
- cameras to produce a visible image
* use remote sensing instruments to track levels of ozone in the upper atmosphere
- sensing, too
* usually start out in an orbit that is elliptical
- take several images from frequency bands in the visual and non-visual range
* vary greatly in size.
* view the Earth and send communications.
* watch Earth's weather from space. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | satellite:
Communication satellite
* Most communication satellites contain well over a hundred filters in their payload.
* are microwave relay stations in the sky
- platforms that house radio receivers and their antenna
* carry the bulk of regional and national television broadcasts.
* use horizon sensors to align themselves properly.<|endoftext|>### equipment | satellite:
Communications satellite
* Most communications satellites are in such orbits
- operate from a circular orbit around the equator
* are a vital part of global commerce
- essentially radio relay stations in space
- part of communication systems
* can reach any point of the globe ignoring all frontiers.
* carry television, telephone calls, and even Internet data.
* link all the world into an electronic neighborhood.
* orbiting above the earth transmit information in the form of microwaves.
* provide a worldwide linkup of radio, telephone, and television.
* transmit TV or telephone signals to Earth.
Geosynchronous satellite
* are high enough to be outside of the Earth's shadow
- too high to watch in the same manner as low-orbit satellites
* can flare when they approach opposition.
* remain in a constant position over the earth.
Military satellite
* cover a broad range in terms of function and orbit.
* record the flashes of their explosions in the upper atmosphere.
* travel in very low orbits.
Modern satellite
* Most modern satellites use several spot beams.
* are active reapeaters because they also amplify the signal they receive.
* make it possible to determine the elevation of any remote peak on Earth.
* provide a way to distinguish ash from water.
Polar satellite
* Many polar satellites occupy low orbits so are visible and travel north-south.
* provide detail information
* provide more detail information<|endoftext|>### equipment | satellite:
Satellite imagery
* consists of digital images of the Earth's surface from space.
* gives a global perspective on the ozone hole.
* has a generally lower resolution compared to aerial photography.
* is an example of passive remote sensing
- important element in collecting remote sensing data
- helpful in monitoring sea ice extent and temperature
* is used as an analysis tool and also in forecasting tropical cyclone intensity
- to study circulation patterns within the Gulf of Mexico
* shows buoyant plumes respond, on the scale of hours, to changes in winds.
* shows that fronts are a major feature in temperature-salinity distribution
- there is frozen ground water on the planet
+ Colonization of Mars: Mars :: Space colonization
* The 'colonization of Mars' by humans is an ongoing debate among scientists. They want to colonize the planet Mars. Satellite imagery shows that there is frozen ground water on the planet. That makes Mars the best choice for a thriving colony off the Earth. The Moon has been proposed as the first location for human colonization. However, Mars has a thin atmosphere. Because of this, it has potential to host humans and other organic life.
Satellite tracking
* allows researchers to get detailed location data on a global scale.
* is used to monitor response vehicles, making deployment more efficient.
Space satellite
* can track migration patterns of Canada geese outfitted with radio transmitters.
* provide navigation, precision guidance, communications and related capabilities.
Space station
* Most space stations consist of modules.
* Some space stations create artificial gravity
- reflect sunlight
* are large orbiting satellites that stay in space for years at a time.
* are located in orbits
- main trading and scientific centers of the galaxy
* remain in orbit for years at a time. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | satellite:
Weather satellite
* Most weather satellites are in geosynchronous orbit.
* Some weather satellites carry instruments.
* are a great way to study clouds and cloud patterns from above
- spacecraft which collect and relay weather information to Earth
- vital in gathering national and global weather information
* furnish the data necessary to provide early warnings of severe storms.
* provide an indirect measure of wind speed and direction
- daily reports of temperatures and cloud patterns
* see only what happens at the cloud tops.
* take pictures of how the weather is.
Setup
* has characteristics.
* includes sections.
* is manners.
Stereo
* are artificial satellites.
* are located in cars
- parties
- pictures
- used for playing
* have sound.
* includes circuits
- electron tubes
- infrastructures
- phonographs
- pickup arms
* includes radio receivers
- sets
- resistors
- sections
* includes tape decks
- transport
- tone arms
- vacuum tubes
* is electronic equipment
### equipment | teaching aid:
Audiovisual
* are teaching aid
- used to facilitate group discussions and the sharing of personal experiences
* enhance learning.
* is teaching aid
* wear thin after a while. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment:
Telephone
* All telephones contain electronic components that are sensitive to radio.
* Are often card-operated.
* Many telephones let users store frequently-used phone numbers in the phone's memory
- use small text displays that show dark characters on a mid-tone background
* Most telephones use conductive pads that are conductive thru and thru.
* Some telephones are able to store speed dialing lists.
* Some telephones have a switch that converts it from one to the other
- tone pad, but the phone connection is still pulse dialing
- both touch-tone and pulse capability
* allow almost instantaneous linkage between people anywhere on earth.
* are a rarity
- capable of rings
- communicates
- communication devices
- cools
- crucial to summoning police, fire, or medical assistance in an emergency
- electronic equipment
- everywhere
* are fully automatic with direct dialling throughout the world
- to most parts of the world
- largely used in America between private houses and shops, cab stands etc
* are located in desktops
- fraternity houses
- hospitals
- hotels
- offices
- phone booths
- telephone booths
- non-switchboard for direct use day or night
- over a century old, but have yet to penetrate much of the globe
- rotary, and have separate microphones and receivers, just as phones of that time did
- telecommunication
- the lifelines of the IT sector
- tools that people use every day to make their jobs a little easier
- ubiquitous and cellular services offer mobility
* are used for communicating
- talking
* begin ringing in politicians' offices around the world.
* can fail due to power outages and downed or damaged cables.
* convert speech and data to electrical energy, which is sent great distances.
* directories is another resource for identifying certain types of organizations.
* directories, like web search engines, are big business.
* feature world-wide direct dial.
* have international direct dialling to most countries in the world
- letters on the dialpad
* help to build interpersonal skills, which are more important than technical skills.
* includes circuits
- telephone receivers
* is considered an informal means of communication
* is one of the easiest way of communication
- fastest mediums to communicate with outside world
* move information from place to place as speech or as faxes
- information, but power lines move energy
* operate with calling cards.
* provide a vital link to the outside world.
* ring when they receive additional voltage.
* switches only talk to telephones.
* tariffs the cost associated with local residential and business telephone service.
* telecommunication system which provide communication through conversation.
* tragicomic study in urban energy and rootlessness.
* vary in the number of telephone numbers it is set up to remember.
### equipment | telephone:
Cordless telephone
* are among the most popular of telephones used at home
* comprise a base station and a handset.
* transmit on frequency bands.
Handset
* Some handsets are as small as cell phones
- cell-phones
- have color screens and can display color images
* are electronic devices
- part of telephones
Mobile telephone
* Use of mobile telephones.
* are like computers
- low power radio devices that transmit and receive microwave radiation
* interfere with medical electrical equipment.
Public telephone
* Most public telephones are card-operated.
* Some public telephones accept credit cards and there are still some public phones that accept coins
* are accessible for the disabled and hearing-impaired
* have two different systems
- systems, cash and callcard
Speakerphone
* are telephones.
* can cause sound disruption through echoing or sound breakup. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | telephone:
Voice mail
* is essentially the computer-based equivalent of the home answering machine
- inaccessible to deaf people
- messages
* is the new and efficient way for companies to avoid talking to customers
- transmission and storage of digitized spoken messages
Voicemail
* computer system tied into a company's telephone network.
* is intended to be for short term storage of messages
- used when staff are busy on other calls
* technology that extends the power of the phone system.
Wireless telephone
* All wireless telephones are basically radio transceivers.
* are common in homes
* support portable communications.<|endoftext|>### equipment | telephone | wireless telephone:
Cellphone
* Some cellphones require adapters to use headsets.
* Now, the new technologies are everywhere and the cell phone is one of the most visible forms of it. If the technology can have a lot of advantages, it can also be the cause of some disagreements. Cellphones have negative impacts in many ways. In effect, they can have negative impacts on society,on our daily activities and on communication.
* Another 448,000 were injured. Cellphones are also a source of distraction in class. Teenagers that use to text in school have some trouble of understanding. Plus, the fact of texting cause an addiction and it appears everywhere, while eating, while talking, it disrupts every mundane activities.
* Another 448,000 were injured. Cellphones are also a source of distraction in class. Teenagers that use to text in school have some trouble of understanding. The fact of texting cause an addiction and it appears everywhere, while eating, while talking, it disrupts every mundane activities.
* also reduce the effectiveness of anti-asthmatic drugs, and retard recovery from illness.
* are a public utility
- electronic devices
- located in purses
- used for communication
- wallpaper
* can serve as a great form of contact.
* do save a lot of lives.
* includes circuits
- electron tubes
- resistors
- sections
- telephone receivers
- vacuum tubes
* tapping for the purposes of combatting crime universal practice for GSM operators.
* work by communicating with a network of receivers covering adjacent areas
- in Georgia Strait, but intermittently in some areas | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | telephone | wireless telephone:
Cellular phone
* Some cellular phones have a limited clear reception area
* allow individual motorists to detect freeway incidents
- the forester to be in nearly constant contact with the office
* are a neccesity for people who travel a lot and can be seen almost anywhere
- also useful, but primarily for communicating with people back home
* are basically low-power radio telephones
- battery powereds
- cheaper to own than ever
- gear
- good at placing phone calls
- lighter and cheaper
- literally everywhere
- pervasive in Mexico
- products
* are to be used for medical emergencies only
- only in designated areas
- very common and can be rented for short stays
- way expensive to use
* can add convenience and security to employees' lives
- interfere with pacemaker functioning
- provide peace of mind, especially in emergency situations
- sometimes work in remote locations with a fixed directional antennae
* emit a low level of microwave radiation
- electromagnetic waves in an omni-directional pattern
* enable responding officers to make voice contact with the scene of an incident.
* generate a very small amount of the total electromagnetic waves in the atmosphere.
* have a wide range and can be used while moving
- an uncanny ability to develop interference or to disconnect
- benefits such as allowing drivers to make emergency calls quickly
- many of the same built-in features as corded phones
* interfere with some patient care equipment.
* offer parents emergency access to their children.
* offer users both convenience, and security
- increased safety and security while driving
* operate on a full duplex channel.
* serve many needs.
* use a single band radio wave that runs on one frequency
- the same frequency over and over by dividing up geographic areas into cells
* utilize electromagnetic waves to convey the voice signal.
* work because of electromagnetic radiation
- in some places, but the networks suffer from overload
- on two different networks, analog and digital
Cellular telephone
* are important devices for reporting emergencies
- portable phones that transmit to a cell station
- telephones
- the most sought after technology in schools
- used for calls
- very popular
* can be analog or digital.
* operate similarly, but use a different portion of the radio spectrum.
* show up in cars.
* use a voice activated transmitter which automatically trips the relay. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equipment | telephone | wireless telephone:
Mobile phone
* Most mobile phones can store one ringtone and logo
- come with facilities of a vibrating mode
* Some mobile phones require an adapter to accommodate a headset
- use shields to reduce exposure to the user
* allow individuals to move from location to location while remaining contactable
- suspects to make calls from anywhere
* are about to become even more useful as communications devices
- an ideal target for thieves, being small, light, portable and valuable
- computers
- extremely useful in an emergency, but illegal to use in the air
- less expensive than land phones, especially considering installation costs
- one of the fastest growing sectors in China's telecommunications market
- part of everyday life
- particularly valuable in emergency situations
- so popular because they can become one's personal secretary
- the exciting new generation of Internet access devices
- ubiquitous and indispensable in Europe
- used for communication
- very personal items, much more than PCs
- wireless communications devices that use frequencies in the microwave band
* are, in effect, tiny radio stations that send and receive
- one imagines, the key object of desire
* become passports to nightlife.
* business field which has become more and more important in recent years.
* emit and receive low level microwave radiation
- radiation by design, whereas hearing aids receive it by accident
* expose the brain to electromagnetic radiation.
* have a very limited range
- slower operating speeds than PCs
* help improve communications in Bangladesh.
* is now a multi-billion dollar industry.
* offer a wide area of coverage and the ability to contact individual people.
* operate on a charged up battery system
- within the radiofrequency range of the electromagnetic spectrum
* radiate RF emissions close to the head.
Test equipment
* Identify the test equipment used to locate faults in computer systems.
* is equipment
- located in laboratories
Trampoline
* are a super off-season conditioner to build strength, stamina, and coordination
- dangerous for all children, due to the potential for neck injuries
- used for exercises
* can cause severe injury in children
- result in head and neck injures as well as broken bones
* cause a desire to jumps.
* includes sections.
* is sports equipment<|endoftext|>Equivalence congruence
* A congruence is harmony
* Congruence applies to geometric figures, including line segments and angles
- consistency between perceptions of the self and what one experiences
* Congruence is also very important between verbal and non-verbal communication
- an equivalence relation
- sought in thought and action
* Congruence is the genuineness and empathy of the authentic therapist
- responsibility of senior leaders
- measure of balance
* Congruences are equivalence relations.
Equivalent
* are cognition.
* is knowledge | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### equivalent:
Complement
* are colors that are opposite one another on the hue circle.
* are goods that are jointly consumed
- used jointly
- usually nouns, pronouns, or adjectives
* consists of enzymes that kill cells when activated by antibody molecules.
* destroys antibody-coated cells, produces inflammation, and regulates immune reactions
- bacteria, produces inflammation, and regulates immune reactions
* enhances the neutralization of virus by antibody.
* facilitates clearance of immune complexes from the body.
* inactivating proteins and intraspecies venom variation in Crotalus oreganus helleri.
* is adjuncts
- construction
- counts
- part of immune responses
- work forces
* lyses the host's cell which then releases it's contents.
* mediates opsonization, chemotaxis, and membrane attack.
* plays a major role in the inflammatory response.
* recognizes bacteria and viruses even before an antibody is formed.
* tend to be products that people consume as a group.
* works to kill microorganisms such as bacteria, yeasts, viruses and parasites.
Substitute
* are athletes
- equivalents
- goods that can replace each other in consumption
* is an equivalent
* made of egg white, food starch, and non-fat milk have no fat.
### equivalent | substitute:
Milk substitute
* differ in water and fat content, sweetness, and ability to color the baked goods.
* have a similar look and taste to milk produced by the mammary glands of a mammal
* A 'Milk substitute' product that resembles milk. Milk substitutes have a similar look and taste to milk produced by the mammary glands of a mammal. People with a lactose intolerance or a milk allergy often replace milk by a substitute
Salt substitute
* Many salt substitutes contain potassium
- have potassium
* Most salt substitutes contain potassium for flavor.
* are permissible and can make food more palatable.
Sugar substitute
* Some sugar substitutes show an increase in cancer in the offspring of animals tested.
* are another alternative for just about everyone, including diabetics
- available in many foods
* replace powdered sugar and glucose syrup in sugarless gum.
### equivocation:
Circumlocution
* are the fig-leaves under which the parts of the body politic are decently concealed.
* is equivocation<|endoftext|>### erect plant:
Yellow nutsedge
* arises from small tubers called nutlets.
* can grow actively even in lawns that have gone brown and dormant from drought.
* grows most actively during the hot months of summer
- rapidly during the hot summer months
* has a yellow-green color
- single fleshy tubers on ends of roots
* is an erect plant
- difficult to control especially once it has formed tubers
- native to Illinois and many parts of North America
- often an indicator of poor drainage
- pale green to yellow in color and grows rapidly in the spring and early summer
- the only green thing in some lawns
- tolerant of wet and poorly drained soils
* produces solitary tubers that arise either from the basal bulb or from a rhizome.
* reproduces primarily by tubers.
* troublesome, difficult to control weed often found in turf areas.
* widespread, highly variable native of North America and Eurasia.<|endoftext|>### erotic feeling:
Eroticism
* can be commercial, so the art expressing it becomes pornography.
* depends on objectification, traditionally of women.
* has little to do with nudity
- many aspects
* is all about the enlivening or awakening of the senses
- an 'erotic' feeling
- as much mental as physical
- part of the goth scene
- sexual arousal
* In other words, if something is sexually exciting, then it is said to be 'erotic'. Eroticism is an 'erotic' feeling. It is named after Eros, the Ancient Greek god of love | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Error
* Most errors commonly associated with computers turn out to be the result of human error.
* are bad, no matter how minor. I've corrected it, thanks for pointing it out
- a natural part of language learning
- an important part of learning and an important part of life
- evil
- failure
- happening
- misconception
- symbolic of unconscious attitudes and wishes
- the symptoms that reveal the presence of latent conditions in the system at large
- usually the substitution of one nucleotide for another, changing the codon
* arising from human fallibility also occur in science.
* can increase when doctors are dealing with infrequently prescribed drugs and tests
- occur during mitosis, especially during early embryonic development in humans
* defines the kinds of errors.
* is an act
- the number of consecutive errors, in real-time
* log is the name and path of the server's error log file.
* skew death statistics, which are used to study disease.
### error:
Bloomer
* are a woman's attire of loose trousers gathered at the knee.
* is an error
### error | blunder:
Bobble
* are blunder.
* is blunder
* maximize the effect of space-dyed yarn.
Fumble
* Some fumbles occur when a ball carrier is fighting for yards after contact.
* is blunder
Snafu
- used mostly as a noun
* small country operating under a fixed exchange rate system.
+ SNAFU: Figures of speech :: Acronyms
* Snafu is used mostly as a noun. It can also be used as a verb but usually in the passive sense.<|endoftext|>### error:
Human error
* Most human error is caused by design error.
* can also be a problem for digital certificates
- cause permanent loss of files
- be either intentional or unintentional in nature
* causes about half the accidents involving trains.
* common thing that happens to every human being.
* destroys five times more data than viruses.
* is also a major factor in periodic surveys.
* is an element of any search for understanding
- inevitable aspect of our environment
- associated with most disasters unless concurrent disease states dominate
- by far the most common cause of fires
- responsible for most of the marine accidents
- still the leading cause of accidents today
- the leading cause of damage to artifacts
* is the main contributory factor involving cyclist collisions
- factor in two thirds of accidents
- primary reason for most lift truck accidents
- yet another important cause of accidents
* leading cause of downtime.
* leads to many accidents.
Lapse
* are pauses
- situations
* exist in coherence, organization, and development.
### error | lapse:
Recidivism
* -Repeat offenders of the same crime.
* is an inadequate measure of the effects of arrest
- based on the number of clients, no the number of referrals
- impacted the most when teaching young offenders how to read
- reincarceration and excludes convictions involving other penal sanctions
* is the pretext with which to justify more and harsher prisons
- tendency to slip back into previous, undesirable behavior pattern
Logical error
* are errors in the structure of the user data and control data on the disc.
* disconformity of the mind to the thing.
Measurement error
* occurs in many fields, such as biometry, epidemiology and economics
- when the input coordinates are from measurements
* plays a big role in regression.
Medical error
* Most medical errors have less to do with carelessness or neglect than with failures of systems.
* account for up to a quarter of the deaths from heart attack, stroke and pneumonia.
* are a leading cause of death and injury in America
- all too prevalent in the health care system
- one of the nation's leading causes of death and injury
- the eighth leading cause of death in the United States
* can also be life-threatening.
* occur in all phases of practice. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### error:
Medication error
* Some medication errors do cause permanent injury and even death.
* account for a significant portion of preventable adverse events.
* are a health issue
- just one of the problems or challenges associated with the use of medications
- more common than adverse drug reactions
* are one of the most common types of errors
- types of preventable adverse events
* occur frequently in hospitals.
* represent only one of the many types of medication related problems.
Omission
* are mistakes
- neglect
- situations
* is an error<|endoftext|>### error | omission:
Apheresis
* allows a single donor to provide more of the single component needed by a patient.
* is an omission
- unusual kind of blood donation
- another treatment for rheumatoid arthritis that removes antibodies from the blood
- dialysis
- less invasive than bone marrow harvesting and requires no anesthesia
* is the method used to collect only one part of blood from a donor
- most efficient way to harvest sufficient numbers of granulocytes for transfusion
- usually painless and causes minimal discomfort
* takes more time than whole blood donation, but the yield of platelets is much greater.
* treatment that removes antibodies from the blood.<|endoftext|>### error | omission:
Ellipsis
* All ellipses have eccentricity less than one.
* Ellipses are a class of mathematical shapes
- common in physics, astronomy and engineering
- like circles that have been elongated slightly, and they are also referred to as ovals
- neon signs of omission and can cause a quotation to look suspect
- oval-shaped loops
- simple enough geometric constructs to capture powerful cosmology
- used often in everyday life as well as in literature
- can be solid or hollow
- do have their own generator, but only for efficiency
* Ellipses have conformal conics as caustics, hyperbola for , ellipses for
- no straight sides
- three dots, no more, no fewer
- two perpendicular axes about which the ellipse is symmetric
- perform two very distinct functions in writing
* Ellipses represent centers of receptive fields
- specific entity attributes
- use cases, i.e. actions or units of functionality in a system
* Some ellipses are much flatter than the earth's orbit.
+ List of literary terms, E, Ellipsis
* Ellipses are used often in everyday life as well as in literature. It is usually used in leaving out or not using words.
Parapraxis
* Parapraxes are full blown psychical phenomenon and always have a meaning and an intention
- slips of the tongue, now, of course, commonly called Freudian slips
* is an error
Parity error
* are often a signal that something is working incorrectly in the system.
* occur when the serial hardware detects an incorrect parity bit.
Random error
* are errors that affect the precision of a set of measurements
- which fluctuate from one measurement to the next
- generally small errors that occur during the process of surveying
* is introduced to mimic the effects of nature on existing lifeforms.
* tend to cancel when individual values are used to determine an average.
Refractive error
* are generally correctable by glasses, contact lenses, or refractive surgery.
* can create distortions.
* cause a disturbance in the way that light rays are focused within the eye.
* is clearly the largest cause of decreased vision in third world countries
- treated with glasses and patching of the normal eye
* occur when the cornea fails to focus light rays precisely on the retina.
* tend to be inherited, but there is no pattern of inheritance.
Skip
* are gaits.
* is an error | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### error:
Slip
* are artifacts
- evasions
- lingerie
- located in drawers
- mishap
- sheets
- shoots that grow from the stem at the base of the fruit
- small plants that form just below the fruit
- the tiny plantlets that grow at the base of the fruit on the fruit stalk
- young people
* cause slips.
* fills in pores and gives a uniform color.
* have their own coefficient of thermal expansion and act independently of the body.
* is blunder
- clay that has been watered down to the consistency of cake icing
* occur when there is too little friction between a person's feet and the walking surface.
Standard error
* are functions of magnitude and ecliptic latitude.
* file to which a program can send errors.
* is also related to sample size
- the output device where error messages are sent
Systematic error
* affect the accuracy, random the precision of measurements.
* are ones that can be repeated and can be accounted for in processing.
* can sometimes drift over time.
* mean that different methods of measurement are being applied to the same variable.
* occur when something causes a constant and consistent error throughout the survey.
### erythrobacter flavus:
Slight halophile
* live in mud on the ocean floor , in seawater , and in garden soil.
+ Halophile, Categorization: Microbiology :: Extremophiles
* Halophiles are categorized by the levels of salt at which they grow best. Halophiles can either be categorized as slight halophiles, moderate halophiles, or extreme halophiles. An example of a slight halophile is 'Erythrobacter flavus'. Slight halophiles live in mud on the ocean floor, in seawater, and in garden soil.<|endoftext|>### esoteric sport:
Ice climbing
* Ice Climbing involves cold, water and ice on the vertical
- technical activity involving the use of ice axes and crampons
* are climbing
- outdoor activities
- recreational activities
* attracts world-class athletes to take a peek at the mountain tops.
* becomes dominant in the winter months.
* comes in all levels.
* is an esoteric sport
- inherently dangerous activity
- as much a mental endeavor as it physical sport
- still a relatively young sport, but in recent years it's been gaining popularity
* requires much different gear and technique than rock climbing.<|endoftext|>### especially consuming pain:
Cancer pain
* Most cancer pain comes from a tumor pressing on a bone, nerve or body organ.
* can be acute or chronic
- constant or recurring
* common problem that can be treated by a patient's cancer care team.
* complete subjective phenomenon, and everyone's pain threshold is different.
* is an especially consuming pain
- unpleasant sensation of varying degrees of discomfort or soreness
- associated with increased emotional distress
* remains an undertreated and neglected public health problem.
* responds to many forms of treatment in addition to medications.
### especially dangerous:
Unhealthy diet
* Most unhealthy diets lead to diseases
- liver diseases
* are especially dangerous.
* play roles. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### especially endangered today:
Indigenous people
* All indigenous peoples have the right to self-determination.
* Indigenous Peoples continue to claim recognition of their prior ownership of ancestral territories
* Many Indigenous people rely on biodiversity as a means of survival and a source of future capital.
* Many indigenous people continue to live in thatch roofed houses built entirely of forest products
- eat far more fish than the average
- survive directly off of the resources found in the rainforests
* Many indigenous peoples believe implicitly in witches and ghosts, even today
- have problems accessing health centres and hospitals because of racism
- view themselves as the world's most experienced environmentalists
* Most indigenous people live along the coast or on river banks.
* Some indigenous people utilize saponins to poison and capture fish
- peoples depend upon killed animals to survive.
* can grow up believing that they are lower social class, or less important. Indigenous people sometimes have to fight for their own land, their own history, human rights and 'equality'
* are Australia's poorest, least healthy and most jailed section of society
- especially endangered today
- human beings just as other peoples are
- more spiritual but less capable in advancing civilisation
- one source of leadership
- peoples who are born in and naturally inhabit a region
- responsible for most of the world's cultural and biological diversity
- rich in resources and wisdom, but they have been dispossessed
* are the most disadvantaged group in Australian society
- original inhabitants of many countries
- true custodians of the forest
- to utilize the land according to their practices and traditions
- very often the first victims of nuclear developments
* become ethnic nations when they mobilize to seek independence or autonomy
- their slaves from their births into their graves
* believe in individual freedom, but it is exercised in the context of the group.
* belong to the poorest and most vulnerable on earth.
* die with their forests and grasslands.
* discuss morals, families, community life, spiritual values and ceremonies.
* do have business aspirations and business acumen.
* experience numerous forms of oppression.
* have a land-based culture
- legacy of sustainable earth stewardship
- number of concerns with current intellectual property laws
- range of interests in the management of forested areas
- relationship to the land and are sovereign in ownership of it
- vital role to play in helping to reverse and prevent forest degradation
- and continue to be objectified through processes of colonization
- differing philosophies regarding ownership of land
- inalienable rights over their traditional lands and resources
- little access to modern medicine
* have the right to non-discriminatory employment
- self-government
- their culture, their land and their traditional way of life
* know who they are and where they come from.
* learn early in life to respect everything's place in life.
* live in all the countries of Latin America except Uruguay
- small groups or tribes
* offer a direct link between the present and the ancient past.
* recognise that personal power, learning and thinking are expressed through doing.
* remain at the fringes of the national society
- exceedingly diverse
* represent many peoples, many cultures, and also different ways of thinking.
* retain a strong sense of responsibility for managing and protecting their land.
* see all of life as holy, the sacred and the mundane as one
- the whole cosmos as one integrated whole
* speak Fijian dialects
- about the land they love and the life that is rapidly changing
* use it as a fertility agent and for sexual function in both men and women.
* value their elder wisdom traditions and their oral transmissions.
* view the world in which they live as an integrated whole. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### especially harmful:
Weed whip
* are especially harmful.
* can be devastating to young trees.
### especially important:
Intracranial hemorrhage
* are especially important.
* becomes increasingly more common with advancing age.
* can occur, if the metabolic derangement includes a bleeding diathesis.<|endoftext|>Essence
* All essences contain a small amount of alcohol, used to preserve the integrity of the mixture.
* Every essence has a basic quality of energy which comes from the Being it is channelled from
- is immortal
* are different from essential oils, which have a fragrance and are applied externally
- the essential oils used in aromatherapy
- gifts from nature that heal our emotions
- phenomena that are the necessary and invariant aspects of things
- solutions of volatile oils in alcohol
- supposedly characteristics of our concepts rather than of objects in the world
- the primal stages of esse , and make things to be the kind of things they are
- vibrational patterns infused in water
* certain capacity to exist.
* contains the extracted food compounds found in fresh juice.
* describes the concentrated oil of various flowers, fruits, herbs and plants.
* influences life.
* is content
- grasped by rational analysis, as it is separate from change
- immanent in substance
- neither a place nor a time, an insight or a state of mind
- one of the largest magazines for black women
- said to be lost during ejaculation for men and either orgasm or childbirth for women
- self-relation in relation to other
- substances
- what provides the shape or form or purpose to matter
* support harmony, balance and integration of body, mind, soul and emotions.
* term from Chinese medicine.<|endoftext|>### essence:
Flower essence
* All flower essences work on the mental level to cure the physical ailments.
* Flower Essences are homeopathic-type remedies that come in a liquid base
- safe, natural and non-toxic
- tools to enhance an individual's spiritual and inner growth
- vibrational medicines, hence their effect on emotional states
- have no known side effects
* act on the electrical systems of our animal companions.
* are a gentle way of using the essences of plants in water
- full of the life force energy released from flowers at their peak blooming time
- infusions of flowers in water
- know for their ability to assist with certain negative emotions
- liquid, non-toxic, vibrational remedies made by flowers
- most effective when taken in small amounts throughout the day
- prepared with living flowers that impregnate spring water with their essence
- prominent in the practice of aromatherapy
- safe and powerful catalysts that anyone can use
- subtle energy patterns imprinted into water and have no fragrance
- the catalysts in the balancing process
- tinctures of flower petals that help heal emotions
- water-based solutions which contain the essential energies of flowers
* can widen the frequency response of the mind.
* contain the life-force energy released from flowers at the peak of their bloom.
* have no side effects and can combine with any treatment of traditional medicine.
* help break the patterns of attracting responses to our negative emotions
- the physical by clearing out emotional issues
* unlock our inherent positive qualities such as love, courage and joy.
* work directly with both the electrical and the central nervous systems
- to heal both physical, mental and emotional illness
Vibrational essence
* are all infusions of energy patterns into water.
* work the same way within our system.
### essential fatty acid:
Linolenic acid
* component of the defense response to both insects and pathogens.
* is an essential fatty acid
- example
- found in cold-water fish | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### essential human characteristic:
Autonomy
* begins to develop with disengagement from parents.
* can be a self- esteem builder.
* cohesive process that builds unity in diversity.
* concept repugnant to the exercise of the right of self-determination of peoples.
* critical ethical principle, as autonomy is based on the right to self-determination.
* enables children to make decisions for themselves.
* involves initiating and regulating one's own actions.
* is about personal control over life events.
* is an essential human characteristic
- instrument for cultural survival and national cohesion
- as difficult to see archaeologically as is gender
- characterised by the capacity for spontaneity, awareness and intimacy
- crucial to achieving a sense of self-worth
- derived from the Greek meaning self-law
- devoid of making decisions on the possibilities of rewards or punishments
- independence
- more than freedom from outside restraint or freedom to make personal choices
- related to resilience
- self-government
- something that philosophers often talk about
* is the aspect of persons that undue paternalism offends against
- greatest desire of a creative and constructive mind
- name of the game at charter schools
- overriding principle in the U.S. and other Western nations
- principle that addresses the concept of independence
- state of existing or functioning independently from another or others
* liberty generating principle.
* logical property that is highly desirable for the laws of physics to possess.
* means assertion of our own needs, making choices and finding our own partner.
* occurs when young adults leave home.
* process for building a new national identity nourished by cultural diversity
- of national liberation, of national reconciliation
* refers to the recognition and respect for an individual's right to live with free choice.
* strongly influences the decision of individuals to join and stay with an organization.
* is something that philosophers often talk about. The idea occurs in moral, political, and bioethical philosophy. It means that someone is able to make a sensible decision without being forced to do so by someone else.
### essential human characteristic | autonomy:
Individual autonomy
* direct result of fearless thinking.
* refers to citizens functioning as individuals.<|endoftext|>### essential workplace skill:
Assertiveness
* allows a leader to tactfully push a follower a certain way.
* direct, honest expression of feelings and desires.
* focuses on goal orientation and self-actualizing behavior.
* improves self-esteem and gains respect from others.
* increases the chances of our needs being met.
* involves clear and firm communication within respectful relationships.
* is also different from nonassertiveness
- an essential workplace skill
- contrasted with aggressive and passive behaviors
- courage balanced with consideration
- one of the essential skills in the modern working environment
- positivism
- presented as a set of learnable skills of verbal and non-verbal communication
* is the ability to stand up for one's rights without denying the rights of others
- marriage of courtesy and insistence
- skill that tops the list for success or failure in any workplace situation
- very different from aggressiveness
* manifestation of self-esteem.
* positive and constructive approach to personal effectiveness.
* predicts threat and challenge responses to potential stress among women.
* promotes equality in relationships.
* requires a change in attitude as well as a change in behavior.
* sees everyone as equal with equal rights and equal responsibilities.
* skill that can be learned through practice
- which is useful to everyone
* way of communicating, thinking and being that is directly related to self-esteem. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### established alternative society:
Monasticism
* are austerity.
* comes from a root word which means to be alone.
* continues to be main source of reforming church.
* is also another major Christian social unit.
* is an established alternative society
- example of communism at a later stage in church history
- one of the oldest human institutions
- probably the most organized quest for holiness in history
- the physical expression of celibacy
* sacrifice and a voluntary martyrdom.
* speaks to the heart while scholasticism speaks to the mind.
* very ancient human phenomenon.
Estimation
* include assumptions.
* is an important everyday life skill
- especially important when children use calculators
- introduced as a strategy for determining reasonable sums
- the honest prediction of what is likely to happen
- used to decide how many resources are needed for a given population
- very important when using a calculator
* use methods.
### ethical challenge:
Passive euthanasia
* allows one to die by withholding or withdrawing life supporting means.
* carries the same distinctions of voluntary, nonvoluntary and involuntary.
* includes forgoing life support or extraordinary treatments.
* involves allowing someone to die.
* is an ethical challenge
- the withholding of life-saving measures for the dying person
- when nothing is done to prevent death
* occurs when medical treatment is withheld per a patient's request.<|endoftext|>Ethnic group
* All ethnic groups are vulnerable to panic disorder.
* Any ethnic group has their own unique cultural patterns, heritage, and value system.
* Every ethnic group experiences some social distance from the others
- has at least one herb that is used to flavor their traditional dishes
- speak different language
* Many ethnic groups hold annual festivals to share their culture and food
- use several names to identify their genealogy
* Most ethnic groups grow a variety of crops, using very basic tools.
* Some ethnic groups are more likely to develop lactose intolerance
- prone to acquiring the disease than others
- prone to particular diseases
- have high alcoholism rates either for social or biological reasons
- prohibit certain herbs in pods and mustard seeds
- use imported canned foods as staples in their diets
* are also free to teach their own languages
- defined by linguistic, cultural, ancestral, national or regional ties
- groups that claim a common history, tradition, beliefs, and ancestry
- in conflict over power
- people who have culture, language, history or traditions in common
- publicly defamed when they lack power and influence
- subject to racial oppression and discrimination
* differ in how tightly they are organized.
* exhibit native articlessuch as woven blankets, wood cravings, and jewelry.
* face different barriers posed by customs, religion, and history.
* hate other ethnic groups.
* have a name for themselves, a territory and a sense of group solidarity.
* have their own cultures
- specialties, but basically it's all subsistence food
* stage their own celebrations.
* take many forms.
* tend to be more intense with the groups involved speak different languages
- fight only for their own interests
### ethnic reality:
Jewish identity
* developing historical phenomenon.
* is an ethnic reality.
* mixture of religious, historical, and ethnic factors. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### ethnos:
Ethnic minority
* Ethnic minorities are also under-represented
- located in cities
- occasional victims of incidents of discrimination
- particularly vulnerable
- the fastest growing segments of workers and consumer markets
- well represented at all levels of government
- woefully underrepresented in the ranks of ealth care professionals
- continue to be subject to discrimination and repression
- face both linguistic and cultural barriers to care
* Ethnic minorities make up about a third of Burma s population
- seven per cent of the UK population
- tend to have larger families
* Many ethnic minorities have newspapers and magazines written in their own language.
* Some ethnic minorities have distinctive styles of houses.
* is ethnos<|endoftext|>### etiologically-centred universe:
Chronic disease
* All chronic diseases are acute diseases that have been suppressed.
* Any chronic disease affecting the heart, kidneys, gut, and other organs can result in fatigue.
* Many chronic diseases begin during periods of nutritional deficiencies
- can interfere with the production of red blood cells and result in anemia
* Many chronic diseases have an environmental component
- their start due to the condition of the mouth and teeth
- result from the overproduction or underproduction of dopamine
* Most chronic diseases originate within our genetic makeup.
* Many chronic diseases require special treatment, as this has to be done for a long time. Chronic disease can even last for a lifetime.
* affect a large proportion of the elderly and are a major public health burden.
* are a community-wide burden
- actually multifactorial
- hard on the body
- now the major cause of death and disability worldwide
* are often diet-related, and they start building up early
- multifactorial, with established noninfectious risk factors
* bring different challenges to health care.
* can cause severe liver fibrosis and liver failure
- reduce efficiency and increase costs
- severely limit genetic capability
- take their toll on mother and baby
* develop slowly.
* do often stem from infections.
* has an excessive impact on minority populations
- personal, occupational, and financial costs
* have their origin in food allergies.
* is an etiologically-centred universe
- recognised as the human condition
* leads to functional decline and disability.
* pose a significant burden in mortality, morbidity, financial, and social cost.
* progress slowly and are of long duration.
* rare in hunter- gatherer societies.
* reduces immune function, ie., diabetes.
* tends to burn out with age
- fade with age
### etiologically-centred universe | chronic disease:
Interstitial cystitis
- inflammation of the bladder wall
- inflammatory bladder condition
* completely different disease.
* difficult disease.
* is an inflammation of the bladder wall
- tissues of the bladder wall
- characterized by urinary frequency, urgency and pain
- disease in which there is an inflammation of the bladder wall
- more common in women than men
* urological disorder with psychologically distressing symptoms.
Eucaryote
* are cells that have their DNA in a nucleus inside the cell.
* have nuclei and other membrane-bounded organelles.
* is an organism
* show up too soon. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Eukaryote
* All eukaryotes have mitochondria -compartment specialized for aerobic respiration.
* Many eukaryotes also have primary cilia
- have cell walls
* Most Eukaryotes are unicellular and multicellularity evolved many times independently in eukaryotes.
* Most eukaryotes have a short, tandemly repeated DNA sequence motif on their chromosome ends
- at least some diploid cells in their life cycles
- flagella
- mitochondria, and all multi-cellular eukaryotes do
- motility
- reproduce sexually
* Some eukaryotes absorb nutrients
- also have a cell wall
- are single-cell organisms
- cause diseases
- have a flagellum, which has a more complex structure than that of prokaryotes
* Some eukaryotes have cell structures
- chloroplasts
* Some eukaryotes have complex internal structures
- great values
- nuclei
- quality
- require proteins
* Some eukaryotes undergo binary fission
* also have enhancer regions to control gene expression.
* are a descendant of prokaryotes but are no longer classified underneath that branch.
* are cells that can do anything
- which have a nucleus and organelles
- colonies
- complex cells with many organelles and other structures in the cell
- far more metabolically diverse than prokaryotes
- limited in the forms of nitrogen they can use
* are more closely related to archaebacteria
- related to archaebacteria than are eubacteria are to archaebacteria
- much larger and more complex than bacteria, and have many more genes
- organisms made of cells with a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles
* are organisms that do store genetic material in their nucleus
- hold their chromosomes in a nucleus
- whose cells contain complex structures enclosed within membranes
- simply a milti-cellular organisms
- the organisms made up of eukaryotic cells
- very good at endocytosis
- what single cell organism evolved from
* can be unicellular or multicellular
- move using flagella or motile cilia
- operate their metabolic processes on less food
* carry their DNA packaged in chromosomes inside the cell nucleus.
* contain DNA associated with protein
- many subcellular compartments called organelles
- true nuclei with linear chromosomes and membrane bound organelles
* control gene expression at the level of a. transcription.
* differ from earlier prokaryotes in that they have a nucleus.
* divide by meiosis for sexual reproduction
- mitosis or meiosis
* do it very differently.
* have MANY origins of replication, all of which run concurrently.
* have a distinct nucleus and distinct organelles
- more sophisticated transcription regulation mechanism than prokaryotes
- nucleus with linear chromosomes that are much more complex
- nucleus, and a more complex cell structure
- number of membrane-bound compartments that are used for a variety of purposes
- simple cell structure compared to prokaryotes
- diverse cell shapes
- large nuclear genomes, located on a number of chromosomes
* have many and prokaryotes have few
- membrane- bound organelles
- more than one RNA polymerase
- much more non-coding DNA than bacteria or archaea
- multiple linear chromosomes
- nuclei and membrane bound structures within their cells
- several complicated chromosomes
- the high energy efficiency needed to develop complexity
- their electron transport system internally, in mitochondria
- unique membrane bound organelles that can carry out specialized sets of reactions
* include ciliates.
* includes cell membranes
- corpi
- cytoplasm
- plasma membranes
- sections
- vacuoles
- derived from the roots eu meaning typical, and karyon meaning nucleus
* move much faster than prokaryotes.
* possess linear chromosomes, a membrane-bound nucleus and complex organelles.
* seem to have originated as a mutualism between prokaryotes.
* typically have their DNA arranged in a number of linear chromosomes.
* wrap their DNA around proteins called histones.
+ Cell, Kinds of cells
+ Unicellular organism: Microbiology | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### eukaryote:
Multicellular eukaryote
* are made of two fundamental cell types.
* show a series of phenomena that are important for our discussion.
### eukaryotes:
Protoctist
* All protoctists are eukaryotes.
* Some protoctists obtain food by invading other organisms and living as parasites.
### eukaryotic cells:
Hematopoietic cell
* are eukaryotic cells
- responsive to a number of cytokines
- somatic cells
* form a differentiation hierarchy.
* produce blood cells.
Mammalian cell
* Many mammalian cells can detect and migrate upward in a gradient of chemoattractant.
* Most mammalian cells express two MPRs.
* divide by undergoing a process called a cell cycle.
* have limited capacity to introduce double bonds in fatty acids.
* lines The problem of diploidy and polyploidy Mutation rates.
* require positive signals from growth factors for cell division.
* respond to addition of growth factors by turning on transcription of key genes.<|endoftext|>Eukaryotic organism
* All eukaryotic organisms have mitochondria
- living in water, however, face some problem with their oxygen supply
* Many eukaryotic organisms are single celled, like the amoeba.
* Most eukaryotic organisms are aerobic
- have activities
- undergo sexual reproduction
* Some eukaryotic organisms contain chlorophyll pigment
* Some eukaryotic organisms have majorities
- materials
- organelles
* have a similar type of reproductive method known as mitosis
* include amoebas.
* posses the nucleus and cell organelles.
* undergo reproduction
### european policy:
Agricultural policy
* Agricultural policies affect more than just farms and farmers
- attempt to influence yields, commercial crop outputs, etc
- can impact producers, consumers, taxpayers and trade
* focuses on the goals and methods of agricultural production.
* is European policy.
+ Farming, Food
### eusocial insects:
European honeybee
* Most european honeybees have defense.
* Some european honeybees leave natural enemies.
* are eusocial insects.
- innate defense<|endoftext|>Evaluation
* are models which attempt to capture and summarise reality
- the standards by which characters measure their progress
* feedback mechanism that implies purpose and progress.
* function of the conscious mind.
* is an assessment of a soldier's current duty performance
- everyday process of gathering information with which to make important decisions
- individual process that requires independent judgment and critical thinking
- appraisals
- fundamentally a process of deciding what is valued
* is the ability to make a judgement about the value of something by using a standard
- act of deciding what is good, bad, or mediocre
* is the process applied to an expression in order to derive a character string
- by which a program is executed in Common Lisp
- of determining the value and effectiveness of a learning program
* is the process of making judgements on the basis of the information collected
- judgments based on criteria and evidence
- measuring the effect of what was achieved
- seeing how things are going and to change the process if needed
- rendering of a judgment based on merit
- used to judge or measure attitudes and ideas, programs, projects and goals
* long-term process that can create opportunities for greater success.
* process of growth that involves the assessment of strengths and weaknesses.
* refers to determinations of program effectiveness.
* refers to the decision-making which follows assessment
- screening, assessment, and diagnosis of language and speech disorders
* relates to the process of making judgment on quality, value or worth based on criteria.
* skill in which many students get little practice or guidance.
* system by which management processes and procedures improved.
* tool for measuring personal progress toward individual or course goals. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### evaluation:
Evaluation research
* form of program evaluation.
* is the measurement of the effectiveness of a specific practice or program.
Formative evaluation
* is the information that helps to shape and form the curriculum
- type used to evaluate the course while it is in progress
* tool used t o improve instruction.
Partial evaluation
* is program transformation that automates a program specialization process
- the process that automates program specialization
* technique for program specialization.
Program evaluation
* are reviews of specific management issues, policies, or programs.
* form of systematic inquiry that is related to but distinct from research.
* is an activity which summarizes the accomplishments of a program.
* is the study and analysis of innovations and interventions in education
- systematic study of the value and impact of services provided
Qualitative evaluation
* attempts to describe what is going on.
* is used in areas where it is difficult to develop quantitative measures.
Summative evaluation
* can also mean measuring changes in participants' attitudes.
* focuses on the impact or outcomes of a program.
* is an assessment or measure of effectiveness at the end of a time period.
* tool used to make personnel decisions.
### events:
Current event
* Current Events Keep informed of current events as they happen in the world
- Talk about Current Events that are going on in the world
* are events
- located in newspapers
### everyday effort:
Self improvement
* desire that is shared by all.
* is an everyday effort
- big business in America
- improvement
* means self evaluation.
### everyday occurrences:
Power surge
* are everyday occurrences
- lethal to computer memory
- notorious for causing major damage to sensitive PC innards
* can melt transmission lines.<|endoftext|>### everyday reality:
Persecution
* Some persecution exists, mostly when the women gets pregnant.
* also continues under communism.
* can have harmful effects on the church
- vary greatly from region to region in large countries
* deed of the flesh.
* has a natural way of clarifying where people stand in belief and commitment.
* is abuse
- an everyday reality
- common at the local level and in everyday life
- endured by many in the name of religious rights
* is one of the most vicious of all crimes against humanity
- universal results of manifested power
- present when there is any form of domestic abuse being perpetrated
* is the badge of authenticity
- experience of self-negation based on idealization
- harassment of a faith or race with ill-treatment
- medicine of indemnity which cleanses our mind and body
* part of the experience of minorities.
* political, social, material state.
* process for maturity.
* recognized basis for asylum.
### everyday reality | persecution:
Religious persecution
* comes in many shapes and sizes.
* is often only part of a larger ethnic or political struggle.
* new development in the occupied Arab lands.
* way of life in China.
### everywhere:
Airborne microbe
* are everywhere.
* get into the tanks via leaks or vents.
Fatty food
* Most fatty food contains cholesterol.
* Some fatty food includes nuts.
* Some fatty foods are soft and creamy
- contain large amounts of salt
* are everywhere
- typically the cause for gallstones
* contribute to arterial plaque
- atherosclerosis which major contributor to heart attacks
* take longer to digest than other foods and can cause stomachaches during a game.
* tend to be low in fiber and overall nutrition and often high in sugar and calories.
Green shoot
* push through wet earth and start their wavering climb toward the sun.
* sprout up after a prescribed burn.
Wild orchid
* Most wild orchids bloom only once a year.
* occur throughout North America.
* produce great quantity of seeds, flowering only once a year.
Wild yeast
* is everywhere.
* metabolizes complex sugars and starches from carbohydrates. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Evidence
* Most evidence currently indicates that cephalopods are color blind.
* Much evidence suggests that genes play a role in the development of alcoholism.
* Some evidence also points to a link between vitamin D and reduced risk of colon cancer
- shows that zinc-containing toothpaste can reduce existing plaque
- suggests an association between obesity and stillbirths
* Some evidence also suggests that narcotics reduce the frequency of periodic leg movements
- regular alcohol consumption increases breast cancer risk in women
- smoking leads to decreased attentiveness and efficiency
- the hormones change the lining of the uterus
* Some evidence exists that auditory stimuli can influence sexual development
- bioluminescence is also critical to triggering full mor- phogenesis
- macular degeneration is, in part, an inherited disease
- exists, however, that obese women delay or avoid medical and preventive care services
- finds trans fats as bad as saturated fats in raising cholesterol
* Some evidence indicates that acupuncture induces a release of endorphins in the brain of humans
- blessed thistle also has anti-inflammatory properties
- bone mass can be enhanced by increased calcium consumption
- civilian gun ownership helps prevent crime
- eating disorders are linked to serotonin
- fungal nail disease can be employment-related
- now exists showing that obesity has a negative effect on both health and longevity
* Some evidence shows measured concentrations of nitrogen are increasing
- penile cancer is more prevalent among uncircumcised males
* Some evidence shows that estrogen is associated with a lower incidence of coronary artery disease
- newborns pay closer attention to high-pitched tones
* Some evidence suggests a link between diet and breast cancer
- freshwater sunfish and basses opportunistically feed on salamanders
- new neurons are formed well into adulthood
* Some evidence suggests that OCs reduce risk of colorectal cancer, too
- beer can lower the risk of coronary heart disease
- behavior modification is useful in the treatment of sex offenders
- clomiphene-resistant women are resistant to insulin
- different drugs affect different mental capacities
* Some evidence suggests that drinking cold water actually can help burn calories
- water can actually burn calories
- water can burn calories
- established plants are less shade tolerant than seedlings
- humans drove glyptodonts to extinction
- inertia in wage and price formation is higher when inflation is low
- neutrophils continue to act as phagocytes in the infant's gut
- patients with eye problems improve more quickly when they stop smoking
- the age at which menopause occurs is, in part, genetically determined
- they improve infant health and development
- variations in two genes work together to make their feathers curly
- women are more likely then men to get the disease
- supports the idea that silymarin bound to phosphatidylcholine is better absorbed
* are the real-world data which apologists often use in constructing their defense.
* based medicine has several parallels with clinical audit
- the potential to revolutionise many aspects of health education
- practice requires practitioners to have the skills to access and interpret evidence
* bases on observations.
* comes from analyses
- arrangements
- comparison
- everyday experience
- exotic places
- experiments
- facts
- patterns
- responses
- scientists
- sighting
- sites
- to light
* confirms presence.
* consists of observations and data on which to base scientific explanations.
* demonstrates benefits
* disproves theories.
* exists for the modulation of sympathetic neurotransmission by endothelial cell mediators
- of strong pair bonding among dingos
* exists that altered states of immunity are associated with the aging process
- long-term exposure to high arsenic levels increases the risk of cancer
- pigs can breed new strains of influenza which humans can catch
- the vestibular system influences the cardiovascular system
- there are experiences of psychotherapy by which people feel harmed
- to suggest that common molecules control polarity in yeast and in higher cells
* focuses on consequences.
* has effects.
* helps scientists.
* identifies culprits
- likely culprits
* includes development
- discoveries
* indicates ability
- artistic ability
- causes
- considerable differences
- demographic differences
- early development
- earth
- ecosystem stability
- existence
- factors
- great artistic ability
- growth
- likelihood
- measurements
- past life
- phases
- population size
- roles
- strongly that schizophrenia severe disturbance in the brain's functioning
- symptoms
- types
* influences darwin theories
* is anything that can be brought to bear on the truth-claims of Scripture
- used to prove or disprove a fact
- direct proof of a fact
- indications
- located in crime scenes
- presented in books
- strong that salt intake major determinant of stomach cancer risk
- that which elucidates and enables the mind to apprehend truth
* is the building block of logic, and thus, reason
- means by which some fact in question is established or disproved
- physical form in which information is presented to the senses
* leads experts.
* leads to conclusions
- hypotheses
- investigations
- lack
* linking childhood leukemia with the subsequent development of melanoma is mounting.
* links animals with human health.
* points to conclusions.
* proves existence
* provides explanations
- insight
* raises issues.
* refers to information that can be matched against criterion.
* relational notion.
* represents existence.
* reveals ability
* sheds light.
* show that dugongs eat a wide variety of seagrasses and also algae.
* shows activities
- beetle pollination
- common patterns
- contribute factors
- dinosaurs
- diversity
- features
- functions
- importance
- involvement
- key features
- paths
- requirements
- same paths
* shows several features
* shows that flatback sea turtles make seaweed part of their diets
- microbial communities are present deep within the earth
- passive smoking can also increase the risk of heart disease
- some tannins inhibit the growth of bacteria that cause tooth decay
- subjects who diet and lose weight also lose bone
- water molds the earth's surface through, rivers, and ocean waves
* suggests ability
- actions
* suggests adverse consequences
- health consequences
- ancestors
- animal feed methods
- characteristics
- common ancestors
- conversions
- decomposition
- dietary factors
- dominant factors
- effective strategies
- examples
- guidance
- indicators
- individual characteristics
- migration
- ocean life
* suggests other characteristics
- possibility
- productivity
- single common ancestors
- survival
* suggests that fat plays a role in the development of breast cancer
- schizophrenia is due to an inherited biochemical abnormality in the brain
- total system productivity
* supports astrological theories
- big bang theories
- energy sources
- evolutionary scenarios
- health benefits
- ideas
- latter hypotheses
- notions
- occurrences
- original hypotheses
- predictions
- proposals
- status
- suggestions
* supports tectonic plate theories
* tos support analyses
+ Neornithes, Taxonomy: Birds :: Taxonomy
* The classification of modern birds is difficult. Most evidence suggests that the modern bird orders are accurate taxa. 6th ed, Saunders, Philadelphia. More recently, new fossil and molecular evidence is providing an increasingly clear picture of the evolution of modern bird orders.
+ Sexual conflict, Examples: Evolutionary biology
* A classic example is the human pelvis, where females need larger hips for childbirth. A narrower hip size is better for locomotion. The genes that affect hip size must reach a compromise that is at neither the male optimum nor the female optimum. In some cases, the loci involved are expressed differently in males and females. Evidence indicates that intralocus conflict is important in the evolution of many traits.
+ Speciation, Sympatric speciation, Hawthorn fly: Evolution
* Some evidence suggests that sympatric speciation is occurring. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### evidence:
Additional evidence
* comes from everyday experience
* suggests decomposition.<|endoftext|>### evidence:
Anecdotal evidence
* claims that glucocorticoids have a similar effect.
* form of inductive reasoning but it can lead to erroneous conclusions.
* indicates effectiveness in relieving side effects of chemotherapy.
* shows that children who eat breakfast have longer attention spans in school.
* suggest that deer velvet is beneficial for sufferers of male impotency.
* suggests a high rate of success with creatine supplementation.
* suggests that chickpea is resistant to grasshopper predation
- models appearing in adverts aimed at women are getting thinner
- myometrial necrosis is counterproductive to childbearing
- yawning helps increase the state of alertness
- wolves continue to migrate to new ground
Archaeological evidence
* exists for Mesolithic shamanism.
* suggests that shamanic practice is at least twenty thousand years old.
Archeological evidence
* shows equal numbers of humpbacks and gray whales being captured.
* suggests foraging without cultivation in Malaysia.
Available evidence
* leads to conclusions.
* shows dinosaurs.
* suggests conversions
- survival
* supports development
- evolution
- hypotheses
- latter hypotheses
Biological evidence
* indicates considerable differences
- demographic differences
* suggests that in other systems, multiple chemical cues are involved.
Circumstantial evidence
* fact that can be used to infer another fact.
* is evidence.
* suggests that one species is capable of inducing contact dermatitis
- some multidrug resistance is related to other proteins
Clinical evidence
* indicates that androgens have inhibitory effects on breast cancer.
* shows that academic achievement depends on visual abilities.
* suggests that chronic pain occurs more often in girls.
Considerable evidence
* indicates development
- presence
- that chromium levels help determine insulin sensitivity
* suggests that allergy and asthma are caused, at least in some part, by molds.
* supports benefits.
Cue
* are a type of receptive communication
- concrete reminders to do something or attend to something
- the hints or prompts that help participants recall specific features or details
* can also be social.
* represent the sounds of spoken language.
### evidence | cue:
Environmental cue
* are external cues, which resets the circadian clock
- what help shapes individual behaviors
* represent major hardships to crop productivity worldwide.
Nonverbal cue
* can also be facial expressions, body posture, and hand signals.
* depend on good visual acuity.
### evidence | cue | prompt:
Verbal prompt
* are instructions that the teacher gives to the learner.
+ Applied behavior analysis, Definitions and concepts, Prompting, Response prompts
* The first type is verbal prompts. Verbal prompts are instructions that the teacher gives to the learner. Verbal prompts are useful for teaching new behaviors.
Retrieval cue
* are effective means for improving memory recall.
* facilitate the recall or access of the stored information.
Semantic cue
* deal with background knowledge and the meaning expressed in the visual message.
* involve a reader's knowledge of the world.
Visual cue
* aid the child in determining the state of a plant or flower.
* are extremely important for bonding.
* assist children in using their strengths.
* can be very helpful to focus attention and aid memory
- extend a greater sense of shelter to a room
* facilitate recall, association, and discovery.
* help the person with memory problems to understand and remember new information.
* play a large role in courtship in many species.
Vocal cue
* can predict deception.
* indicate level of arousal in infant African elephant roars. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### evidence:
Current evidence
* argues against conversion to human insulin as a cause of hypoglycemic unawareness.
* favors selenomethionine over the other forms of selenium.
* indicates that allergies are the type of diseases most often associated with molds.
* suggests that non-obese diabetic cats can be fed ad libitum.
Direct evidence
* is evidence that, if believed, resolves a matter in issue
* reveals ability.
* supports theories.
Early evidence
* shows that legumes control weeds, improve tree nutrition, and increase wood volume.
* suggests that brushing teeth with toothpaste containing zinc reduces plaque buildup.
Empirical evidence
* indicates that ozone level function of NO x emitted.
* is the primary way that belief is justified in the arena of science.
* shows that high inflation has a negative correlation with economic growth.
Epidemiologic evidence
* shows a strong association between vertigo and migraine.
* suggests that maternal transmission is rare if it occurs at all.
* supports the role of dietary fiber in reducing the risk of colon cancer.
Epidemiological evidence
* indicates that nicotine is as addictive as cocaine heroin and opiates
- smoking increases the risk of age-related cataract
* is statistical evidence connecting the disease to a particular exposure.
* suggests that fish eaters suffer less cardiovascular disease
- smoking major cause of human lung cancer
- spontaneous and induced cancers share the same mechanism
Exculpatory evidence
* includes evidence that bears on the credibility of a prosecution witness.
* is that evidence which suggests a defendant's innocence.
Experimental evidence
* consists of controlled studies using cell cultures or laboratory animals.
* indicates development
- early development
* is evidence.
* shows beetle pollination
- effects
* suggests dominant factors
- involvement
* supports suggestions.<|endoftext|>### evidence:
Fossil evidence
* Most fossil evidence comes from teeth and skin impressions.
* Some fossil evidence indicates monkeys
- shows whales
* Some fossil evidence suggests animals
- monotremes
- supports radiation
* has beavers of the ice age up to six feet in length.
* indicates it had the most highly developed brain of any known cat.
* indicates that archaeocetes had such advanced ears
- horses have gradually increased in size over geological time
- life has changed over time
- over time organisms of increasing complexity appeared on the earth
- the tapirs are most closely related to rhinos
- they first appear in the marine environment
* is consistent with the idea that human beings evolved from earlier species.
* proves existence.
* reveals how organisms changed over time and what our planet was like long ago
- whether evolution has occurred in the past
* shows differences
- diversity
- gradual change and development of organisms in both plant and animal realms
* shows that pandas lived almost as far north as Beijing
- vertebrate legs are newly evolved with respect to fish
- what plants used to be alive in other geological eras
* suggests ancestors
* suggests that blue-green algae have been around for millions of years
- scorpion ancestors lived in the water
- wings only evolved once in the insect lineage
Further evidence
* comes from observations.
* shows that dogs are more closely related to wolves than to foxes.
* supports status
Genetic evidence
* Some genetic evidence shows common ancestors.
* indicates that sog functions to antagonize dpp activity.
* shows common patterns
- that variation among individual humans is very small
* suggests that homosporous ferns with high chromosome numbers are diploid
- the origins of the vertebrate ear date to the early chordates
* supports evolutionary scenarios
Geologic evidence
* shows plants next developed leaves and roots.
* suggests that Martian water has been liberated, perhaps many times, in the past. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### evidence:
Geological evidence
* indicates earth.
* provides support for models of the origin of life on Earth.
* shows that the larger a debris avalanche is, the faster it moves.
Historical evidence
* is used to separate investment fact from investment fiction.
* supports occurrences.
Indirect evidence
* Some indirect evidence is provided by the now-extinct ancestors of toothed whales.
* is evidence
* suggests animal feed methods
International evidence
* is used to test and refine theories of racial and ethnic interaction.
* shows when barriers to international trade fall, living standards rise.
Legal evidence
* given by women carries less weight than that given by men.
* is that statement made under oath before a properly constituted tribunal or officer
- the most common form of indirect evidence
Limited evidence
* exists for an association between inhalation exposure and reproductive effects.
* suggests that alpacas are also susceptible to poisoning.
Little evidence
* exists that genetically altered food is harmful to people.
* supports theories.
Medical evidence
* indicates that exposure to second-hand smoke can be hazardous to health
- marijuana is more damaging to the lungs than nicotine
- primary hypertension in adults begins in childhood
* is critical to determinations of disability.
* shows that 'safe sex' for young teenagers myth.
* suggests a higher incidence of some genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis.
Molecular evidence
* Some molecular evidence indicates bird feathers
- suggests monotremes
* disproves theories.
* indicates that they diverged earliest in fungal evolution.
* supports ideas.
Numismatic evidence
* helps illustrate the coexistence of pagan and Jewish symbol structures.
* plays a part in historical reconstruction now.
Overwhelming evidence
* indicates that prenatal care reduces the incidence of low birth weight.
* shows that males comprise the majority of sex offenders.
Physical evidence
* can be anything from massive objects to microscopic traces
- play an important role in proving a sexual assault case
* deals with material objects.
* is critically important in sexual abuse cases.
Preliminary evidence
* shows behavior
- functions
- that massage can affect the hormonal and immune system
* suggests ability
- metablastin plays a role in cell cycle regulation
* supports hypotheses.
Probable cause
* are evidence.
- the legal reason an officer needs to detain and investigate
* level of belief beyond mere suspicion but short of full certainty.
* means that a reasonable person reasonably believes that a crime has been committed.<|endoftext|>### evidence:
Proof
* are objects which can be viewed, and serve as readable explanations of theorems
- the sine qua non of mathematics
* big word in science.
* is arguments
- how mathematical truths are established
- impressions
- measures
- photographic print
- the justification of a mathematical statement within a formal system
* making is one of the key ideas in mathematics.
* occur only in mathematics.
* refers to the percentage of pure alcohol in a beverage.
* word associated with science that is commonly misapplied by nonscientists
- used to label a concept
+ Integral, Properties, Constants in integration: Calculus
* Proof is again by the definition of an integral. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### evidence:
Recent evidence
* has shown vasodilatation during sepsis is modulated by inducible nitric oxide.
* indicates measurements.
* indicates that amphibians are declining globally
- coral reefs are deteriorating worldwide, and many are in crisis
- morphological changes occur in the retina with increasing age
- nicotine also enhances sustained attention and recognition memory
- regular exercise can reduce eye pressure
* indicates, however, that penguins can locate prey via echolocation.
* leads to hypotheses.
* linking the use of fertility drugs to ovarian cancer remains controversial.
* shows activities.
* shows that blood flow to peripheral and core body tissues is decreased
- other species of mycobacteria form biofilms
- periodontal disease has an effect on several systemic conditions
- the universe is expanding at an accelerating rate
* suggests ancestors.
* suggests that adult vertebrate brains generate new neurons
- apoptosis is an important component of cancer therapy
- both colon and rectum show normal motor activity
- fibroblasts are the main effector of scarless healing in fetal tissue
* suggests that the brain contains unique isoforms of tTGase
- fungi are actually better placed near the animals than the plants
- toothed whales have a built-in compass sense
- vitamin K supplements can be helpful for preventing osteoporosis
- water voles have undergone a long term decline in Britain
- notions
+ 617 Patroclus: Trojan asteroids
* It is a Trojan, sharing an orbit with Jupiter. It was found in 1907 by August Kopff, and was the second Trojan asteroid to be found. Recent evidence suggests that the objects are icy comets, rather than rocky asteroids.<|endoftext|>### evidence:
Scientific evidence
* Some scientific evidence exists for bowel syndromes
- suggests it is useful for treating mild to moderate depression
* comes to light.
* confirms that children already hear when still in the womb.
* disproves theories.
* exists linking death and disease to tobacco use.
* includes a common genetic code
- molecular building blocks that are common to all life forms
* indicates causes.
* is inductive in nature
- the kind of evidence that is used to study natural events
* pertaining to the carcinogenic properties of chemicals change frequently.
* shows that all of our naturally productive living systems are in decline
- lack of proper mental stimulation can actually harm the brain
- modern dogs, wolves, and foxes all have a common ancestor
- people who are addicts have a different brain chemistry than others
- the use of tobacco major health hazard
- they disrupt the endocrine system in wildlife
- types
* suggests benefits
* suggests that ginger can be helpful for various forms of nausea
- intensive confinement causes physical disorders in sows
- snakes evolved from lizards
* supports benefits
- health benefits
- ideas
- that genetic mutations are an underlying cause of cancer
Strong evidence
* demonstrates potential.
* exists tying estrogen exposure to breast cancer.
* identifies culprits
- likely culprits
* indicates that a high proportion of colorectal cancers arise in adenomas.
* links dietary factors to the risk of developing breast cancer.
* shows types.
Testimonial
* Read what people from all over the world have to say about their experience.
* are also important tools in the perception game
- one of the most powerful ways to persuade someone
- statements from alleged satisfied customers
* are the most popular tools of deception used by modern day marketers
- strongest form of advertisement a company, product or service can have
- when individuals offer anecdotal evidence based on personal experience
* is evidence
Evolutionary event
* Most evolutionary events occur during eras.
* Some evolutionary events lead to certain diseases
- over long periods of time and at the molecular level | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### evolving science:
Food safety
* affects all foodservice providers and their customers.
* begins in the kitchen, where food is handled and prepared
- with and relies on the cleanliness of the food handler
* big issue in Europe
- problem today throughout the world, in countries of all kinds
* common-sense issue.
* community concern and takes team effort.
* continues to be a concern for government, industry, and consumers
- high priority for consumers and governments
* cost and a part of doing business in today's environment.
* derives from the ethical principle of do no harm.
* family issue.
* fundamental objective for all governments.
* global and growing public health challenge.
* growing concern among consumers.
* has to be the driving force in the regulation of the food supply.
* high priority issue, particularly in developing countries.
* huge issue in the foodservice industry.
* is also a concern with foodborne illness claiming many lives each year
- about keeping foods at their freshest
- an issue with many of our export markets
- important to a healthy diet
- always a big concern when visiting a foreign country
- an evolving science
* is an important aspect of home preservation
- issue with the public
- trend in Canadian agriculture
* is an issue that concerns every food producer and consumer
- is on the minds of all policy makers
- needs the attention of everyone involved in the food system
- compromised by the lack of a public health laboratory
- everyone s concern
- everyone's responsibility
- important during pregnancy
- necessary to prevent bacteria on raw foods from causing illness
* is of great concern to the general public
- paramount concern to the foodservice sector
- utmost importance to the restaurant industry
- vital concern for our people
- often in the news and on the minds of consumers
* is one of the most vexing issues facing agriculture today
- reason country of origin information is important
- our way of life
- part of our citizens' basic contract with the government
- the final element of sustainable food security
* is the number one concern for consumers
- the produce industry, both organic and conventional
- responsibility of all employees
* major concern for consumers
- driver in the formation of chains
- focus of food microbiology
* needs to be a main ingredient of any salad bar to prevent foodborne illnesses.
* primary consumer and industry concern
- goal of improving the manufacturing environment
* problem around the holidays.
* public health issue.
* shared responsibility.
* top concern of the chicken industry.
* year around concern. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Example
* Some examples are acetylene, methane, hydrogen
- alpha , beta , gamma , x-rays , neutrons , and ultraviolet light
- amoeba, paramecium, bacteria, and cyanobacteria
- aniline, benzene, and acetone
- benzene, ethylene glycol, vinyl chloride and mercury
- buprenorphine and propylhexedrine
- calcium, magnesium, potassium, and gases such as oxygen and carbon dioxide
- cavefish, cave crayfish, millipedes, spiders and crustacean
- crystals of noble gases
- dung beetles, bat droppings, and powdered earthworms
- fleas, ticks, mosquitoes and rodents
- lithium, sodium, and potassium
- nickel tetracarbonyl, phosphine, and osmium tetroxide
- nicotine, pyrethrins, and strychnine
- olive oil, sweet almond oil, apricot kernel oil, sesame oil, and grapeseed oil
- polymer chemistry, photochemistry and mechanistic organic chemistry
- roaches, dragonflies, and grasshoppers
- sugars , starch , and cellulose
* Some examples are the digestive , reproductive, respiratory, excretory , and nervous systems
- fungi which decompose dead, and sometimes living, tissue, for their food
- tiny algae, diatoms and protozoa
- trichinella, found in pork, pinworms, hookworms, and brainworms
- turtles, surface fish, snakes and some mammals
- x-rays, radioactivity, and electricity
- xylene, ethyl ether, and acetone
* are abalone , clams , mussels , oysters , scallops , snails , octopus and squid
- actinidine, b - skytanthine, and boschniakine
- adenine, guanine, thymine, uracil, and cytosine
- admonitions
- agenesis of the eyelids, dermoids, entropion and corneal sequestrum
- albumin, collagen, hemoglobin, and osteocalcin
- algae, bacteria, fungi, protozoa and viruses
- alkali halide crystals, like sodium chloride
- alkaloids like evonine, maytoline, maytine, and hippocrateine
- animals that eat plants or other animals
- aptamers, biosensors, and enzymes
- atropine, caffeine, coniine, morphine, nicotine, quinine, strychnine
* are bacteria, viruses, and many plants and lower animals
- toxins, cancer cells, and blood or tissues from another person
- biogenic amines, amino acids, peptides, and other bioactive molecules
- bone marrow cells and the cells lining the gastrointestinal tract
- brain tumors, anneurysms, infections, and neuralgias
- carbon dioxide, chlorofluorocarbons, ozone, methane, water vapor, and nitrous oxide
- catecholamines and compounds found in the mitochondrial electron-transport chain
- caterpillars, beetles and grasshoppers
- chromic acid, concentrated nitric acid, and potassium permanganate
- citric acid, tartaric acid, lactic acid and malic acid
- clams, crayfish, and a wide variety of worms
- coal and oil, which have energy potential that is released upon combustion
- collagen, elastin, fibroin, and keratin
- conjugated carbonyl compounds conjugated dienes , and polyenes
- deer eating shrub leaves, rabbits eating carrots, or worms eating grass
- diltiazem, verapamil, nifedipine, and amlodipine
- diurnal cycles, seasonal cycles, and annual cycles
- drugs used to treat high blood pressure, sedatives, tranquilizers, and pain pills
- dust, aerosols, ash, smoke, fumes viruses and bacteria
- dusts, fumes, smokes, mists, and fogs
- eggs which have the nutrients to promote the development once fertilization occurs
- encephalopsins in the brain, and pinopsin in the pineal gland
- enzymes, transport proteins, antibodies, and virus coat proteins such as neuraminidase
- essential oils, oleoresins, extracts and distillates
- fats, oils, waxes, and steroids
- fungi, like mushrooms, and bacteria
- glucose, fructose, and ribose
- glycerol or propylene glycol, which is related to active ingredients in antifreeze
- grasshoppers, mice, rabbits, deer, beavers, moose, cows, sheep, goats and groundhogs
- hormones , enzymes , and antibodies
- humans, rats, crabs and many carnivores
* are hydrogen fluoride and chlorine trifluoride
- peroxide , hypochlorite , nitric oxide and nitrogen dioxide
- hydroxide, fluoride, and alkyllithium compounds
- inert gases, combusted fuel gases, hydrogen and vacuum
- iodide, thiolates, cuprates and enolates
- iron, copper, zinc, chlorine and iodine
- isopropyl alcohol, methyl alcohol, and xylene
- larval insects such as caddisflies and mayflies, and crustaceans such as crayfish
- lead, arsenic, and mercury
- leaf shape, body covering, number of legs, and how animals move
- leucocytes in mammalian blood
- lithium , sodium , potassium , and cesium
- located in demonstrations
- lysine, tryptophan, and valine
- minerals formed by reactions with guano
- mitochondria and plastids
* are molds, mushrooms, and yeasts
- yeasts, and mushrooms
- neptunium, plutonium, americium, and curium
- nitrenium, carbonium, and thiiranium ions
- nutrients, organic matter, and dissolved gases
- organic carbon and hydrogen
- oxygen, chlorine, and fluorine
- penicillin, tetracycline, and fluoroquinolones
- pentazocine, nalbuphine, and butorphanol
- pesticides, carbon tetrachloride, cyanides, ethylenediamine and thallium
- petroleum, chlorine gas, sulfuric acid and hydrazine
- phenol derivatives, oil of wintergreen and eucalyptus oil
- phenols, polyesters, epoxides, and silicons
- photosynthetic organisms such as plants, algae and some prokaryotes
- phytates, phosphates, tannates, oxalates, and carbonates
- polystyrene, polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride and nylon
- potassium hydroxide, buffered oxide etch, and sulfur hexafluoride
- presented in tables
- protein, sugar, liver products, and blood cells
- racemases, and cis-trans isomerases
- radon, uranium, radium, and potassium isotopes
- rhizomes, tubers, suckers, stolons, corms, bulbs and bulbils
- scorpions, crickets, spiders, beetles, locusts, flies, etc
- skin cells, muscle cells, bone cells, or virtually any cell in the body
- sodium metal, potassium metal, phosphorus, etc
- sodium, zinc, copper, chlorine, and iodine
- sound waves in solids, liquids and gases
- streptomycin, neomycin, kanamycin, gentamicin, tobramycin
- styrene, butadiene, and vinyl monomers
- such substances as air, water, ammonia, hydrocarbons, and carbon dioxide
- sucrose, glucose and fructose
- sulfates, phosphates and carbonates of non-toxic cations, and carbohydrates
- sweat glands or salivary glands
- tannins - widely distributed in leaves, stems, fruits, bark , and wood of plants
- tear glands, salivary glands, and sweat glands
* are the bald eagle, the polar bear, the monarch butterfly, and the tawny mole cricket
- brown, spore-producing bodies on the lower surface of leaves of ferns
- building of muscles or bone growth
- coelen- terates, sponges, and some echinoderms
- digestive enzymes such as sucrase, amylase, maltase, and lactase
- giant neuron processes of crustaceans
- gourmet edible mycorrhizal mushrooms, such as truffles and morels
- hydroxylation reactions of various aromatic and aliphatic compounds
- light and air waves which mediate visual and auditory interactions
- lining of the mouth, throat, esophagus, rectum, vagina, and anus
- phosphorylation of sugars and the glycosylation of adenine
- production of pure rare earths, zirconium, nickel, copper, uranium, etc
- testes of male and the ovaries of female animals
- toxic elements lead and mercury
- toadstools, mushrooms, and rusts.Sexual reproduction is more common than asexual
- trees bearing fruit, plants growing flowers, or male black widow spiders mating
- yeasts, molds, and mushrooms
- zinc oxide, titanium dioxide and magnesium silicate
* challenge theories.
* deal with growth.
* demonstrate effects.
* explain steps.
* focus on details.
* have limitations.
* help students.
* highlight complexity
- concepts
* illustrate approaches
- cell types
- differences
- importance
- possibility
- properties
* include characteristics
- facts
- outbreaks
- transitions
* includes succinyl choline which skeletal muscle relaxant used in general anasthesia.
* involve phases.
* is generators which produce oxygen by chemical reaction
* provide evidence.
* range from unicellular phytoplankton to multicellular seaweeds that are meters in length.
* require additional steps
* serve purposes.
* show aspects
- many similarity
- ripple effects
* skarn deposits where ore lies at the intrusive-sedimentary contact.
* support competitive exclusion principles
+ Aircraft: Aerospace engineering
* Some aircraft keep in the sky by moving air over their wings. Examples are aeroplanes, helicopters, and gliders. Some aircraft keep in the sky by floating. Examples are balloons and airships.
* Most aircraft use engine power. Examples are aeroplanes, helicopters, and airships. A few aircraft use no power. Examples are gliders and balloons.
+ Alcoholism: Diseases :: Psychology
* The biological mechanisms that cause alcoholism are not well understood. Social environment, stress, mental health, family history, age, ethnic group, and gender all influence the risk for the condition. Consuming large amounts of alcohol produces changes in the brain's structure and chemistry. Some changes occur very early, even when small amountas of alcohol are consumed, in a short time. Examples are tolerance and physical dependence. Because of the changes, it is very difficult for an alcoholic to stop drinking, as this would result in alcohol withdrawal syndrome if the person stops. Alcohol damages almost every organ in the body, including the brain. Chronic alcohol abuse can cause both medical and psychiatric problems.
+ Aromatic hydrocarbon, Types of aromatic compounds, Polycyclics: Organic compounds
* Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons are molecules with two or more simple aromatic rings fused together by sharing two neighboring carbon atoms. Examples are naphthalene, anthracene and phenanthrene.
* A mark can be any image file. The default mark is Red pog.svg and it works well because it is easy to pick up visually on most maps. Some examples are below. Click on an image to see the file description page.
+ Astronomical clock: Clocks :: Astronomy
* An 'astronomical clock' is a clock with special mechanisms and dials to display astronomical information. It displays the relative positions of the sun, moon, zodiacal constellations, and sometimes major planets. Some examples are large public clocks, but others are instruments for use inside buildings. Astronomical watches are made by several manufacturers.
+ Australian English, Words: Australian culture :: Dialects of English
* A few words have come from Australian Aboriginal languages. These are mainly names for animals, plants and places. Some examples are 'dingo' and 'kangaroo'.
+ Bayesian network: Mathematics :: Artificial Intelligence
* They have been used where information needs to be classified. Examples are image, document, or speech recognition, and information retrieval.
+ Berry
* The word 'berry' is used for many different kinds of small fruits that have many seeds and can be used as food. Some examples are raspberry, blueberry and lingonberry.
+ Biochemistry, Macromolecules, Carbohydrates
* Carbohydrates include sugars and starches. Examples of monosaccharides are glucose and fructose. Polysaccharides are long molecules made from many units joined together. Examples are starch, glycogen, and cellulose. Carbohydrates have a number of functions, but the most important is to act as a ready source of energy for the body's metabolism. By breaking the chemical bonds in carbohydrates, energy is released and can be used by the body.
+ Business
* Some businesses need fixed locations. Examples are an office, store, or farm. For some businesses the worker goes to different locations. Examples are carpenters or electricians who work for themselves. They usually bring everything they need for work in their truck.
+ Caregiver: Social sciences :: Personal service occupations
* A 'caregiver', or 'carer', is someone who has the job of looking after people. Usually people that are unable to completely care for themselves. Examples are children, disabled people, or the elderly. When a caregiver is assigned to look after a baby or a child they are called a babysitter.
+ Cell biology
* The most important structures in the cell are the nucleus and the chromosomes, but there are others. The structure of eukaryotic cells is much more complex than prokaryotic cells. Examples are mitochondria and plastids. Molecular biology of the cell', 5th ed. Darnell J. 2004. Molecular cell biology', 5th ed.
+ Crop: Agriculture
* Crops' are living plants grown by farmers. Examples are grain, vegetables, or fruit. These are often domesticated plants which have been selected to improve their size and taste.
+ Double reed: Musical instrument construction
* Examples are the bassoon, oboe and English horn.
+ Dress code: Clothing
* A 'dress code' is a rule about what people should wear. For example, when walking around a city or going to work one needs to have appropriate clothes. These can change depending on different countries and cultures. Some private places might also have a dress code that people need to follow to be allowed in. Examples are churches and nightclubs.
+ Food group, Common food groups: Nutrition
* Sweets is many times a very small group in nutrition guides, and sometimes this group is not included or is put apart from other food groups. Some examples are candy, soft drinks, cake, pie and ice cream.
+ Fracture (geology): Geology
* In geology, a 'fracture' is any kind of separation or break in a rock formation. Examples are joints or faults. These divides the rock into two or more pieces. 6 A fracture can sometimes form a deep, wide crack in the rock. They are usually caused when the rock is not strong enough to hold up under too much stress. This makes the rock crack along its weakest point.
* Examples help illustrate a point.
+ Free radical: Chemistry
* Examples are hydrogen peroxide, hypochlorite, nitric oxide and nitrogen dioxide. Methods in Molecular Biology, vol. Oxidative Stress Biomarkers and Antioxidant Protocols, Humana Press Inc.
+ Gauge
* Examples are rain gauges, speedometers and pressure gauges.
* More examples are below.
+ Immune system
* The immune system can detect and identify many different kinds of disease agents. Examples are viruses, bacteria and parasites. The immune system can detect a difference between the body's own healthy cells or tissues, and 'foreign' cells. Detecting an unhealthy intruder is complicated, because intruders can evolve and adapt so that the immune system will no longer detect them.
+ Limb: Limbs and extremities
* A 'limb' is a part of the body of a living creature, which extends from its trunk. Examples are the branches of a tree, and the legs of a man.
+ Machine: Engineering
* Some machines have many parts that move. Examples are bicycles and clocks.
* Some machines do not have parts that move. Examples are computers and telephones.
+ On Human Nature: Biology books :: 1978 books
* The book tries to explain how aspects of humans and society can be explained from the point of view of evolution. He explains how evolution has left its traces on the characteristics which are the specialty of the human species. Examples are generosity, self-sacrifice, worship and the use of sex for pleasure.
+ Pain, Treatments for pain:
* These medicines decrease the inflammation where the person is hurt. They also work in the brain to decrease pain. Examples are aspirin, ibuprofen, and naproxen. These medicines can make someone sleepy but they are not addictive. They can cause problems with kidneys and with peptic ulcers.
* Other pain medicines may not work at all for those kinds of pain. Examples are carbamazepine and gabapentin.
+ Poison gas: Weapons :: Chemical warfare
+ Red Dead Redemption, Gameplay: 2010 video games :: PlayStation 3 games :: Xbox 360 games
* The open world environment allows players to choose how they want to play. Storyline missions are for progress. Players can also take part in many events they come across as they explore the world. Some examples are public hangings, ambushes, cries for help, and animal attacks. Players can also take part in optional side activities ranging from standoffs, five fingers fillet game, gambling, and hunting animals for pelts and meat.
+ Shelf life, Temperature control: Foods
* Examples are the breakdown of many chemical explosives into more unstable compounds. Nitroglycerine is notorious.
+ Still: Tools
* It does this by first boiling the liquid and turning it into a gas. This gas is then cooled, changing it back into liquid. Stills get their name from the word di'still'ation. Distillation is the process of boiling and cooling a liquid to purify it. Stills are most often used to create alcohol, but they can also be used with any liquid. Some examples are medicines and perfumes.
+ Telluride: Tellurium compounds
* Telluride' is an ion. Chemical compounds containing this ion are called 'tellurides'. Examples are sodium telluride and hydrogen telluride. Tellurides are strong reducing agents. Some tellurides are impure, making them weaker reducing agents. Tellurides are the main source of tellurium in the ground. It only exists at very high pH. At lower pH's, hydrogen telluride, HTe-, is made.
* Examples are included on the talk page.
+ Theoretical chemistry, Major areas of theoretical chemistry
* Examples are molecular docking, protein-protein docking, drug design, combinatorial chemistry.
+ Therapy, Therapeutic effects: Medicine
* A 'side-effect' is an unwanted effect from therapy. For example, taking medications as tablets or injections may cause many sorts of side-effects. Examples are headaches, nausea, rash, constipation, blurred vision and others. Radiotherapy can also cause side effects of nausea, rash on the skin, and vomiting, for example.
+ Tiger, Prey
* Tigers eat many different types of prey, mostly other large mammals. Some examples are deer, monkeys, wild pigs, tapirs and other animals found in Asia. Some tigers may eat up to of meat a day. Tigers kill their prey by clamping down on the prey's throat and suffocating it.
+ Vehicle
* Some vehicles move on land. Most land vehicles have wheels. Examples are bicycles, cars, motorcycles, and trains.
* Some vehicles move on or in the water. Examples are boats, ships, and submarines.
* Vehicles that move in the sky are called aircraft. Examples are aeroplanes and balloons.
* Some vehicles get power from human muscles. Examples are bicycles and skateboards.
* Some vehicles get power from engines. Examples are automobiles, ships, and aeroplanes.
* Some vehicles get power from animals. Examples are carts and chariots.
* Some vehicles get power from wind. Examples are sailboats and iceboats.
* Some vehicles have no power. Examples are gliders and balloons.
+ Visual arts: Arts
* Examples are ceramics, drawing, painting, sculpture, printmaking.
+ Woodward's rules: Organic chemistry
* The rules are named after Robert Burns Woodward. He was a Harvard University chemistry professor who won the Nobel Prize in chemistry. The rules are sometimes called the 'Woodward-Fieser rules', to also honor Louis Fieser. The rules build the prediction on the type of chromophores present, the substituents on the chromophores, and changes due to the solvent. Examples are conjugated carbonyl compounds conjugated dienes, and polyenes.
+ Writing, History of writing, Ancient Egypt: History of technology
* The two cursive scripts were written with reed pens and carbon inks onto papyrus, also by brush onto cloth. Many examples survive. The hieroglyphs were carved into stone or painted onto stone surfaces. Many survive, some with the original colours intact. The key event in the decipherment of hieroglyphic writing was the discovery of the Rosetta Stone. This is a granite slab with the same message written in hieroglyphic, demotic and in Greek. Ancient Greek is well understood, and made possible the interpretation of the other two scripts.
* More examples are given in the test cases. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### example:
Archetype
* are a way the stream of consciousness interacts with biological incarnation
- by nature, hidden in their full expression from the soul of the seeker
- common psychic structures that parallel the common human physical stucture
- eternal
- everywhere, from television to psychology to everyday language
- graphic shapes which combine in various ways to express occult or hermetic ideas
- internal forces that influence the psyche
- like primordial ideas which are charged with emotion
- much the same as what are often called instincts
- original pictures in the minds of all people
- patterns in the psyche that everyone has
- similar to metaphors except they indicate a deeper and stronger feeling or belief
* are the basic forces of the universe, and represent typical fundamental experiences
- content of the collective unconscious
- thus very closely linked to our bodies
- universal, reflecting a primal energy pattern
* bring people together.
* come from the collective unconscious and by definition can be positive and negative
- in male and female
* hold control of the human life cycle.
* is an example
* shape the content of our dreams, emerging in various forms as archetypial images.<|endoftext|>### example:
Carbon tetrachloride
* can also pass through the skin into the body.
* clear, nonflammable liquid which is almost insoluble in water.
* colorless liquid with a sweetish odor.
* has a low potential to bioconcentrate
- mutagenic effect and induces aneuploidy in several in-vitro systems
* has high acute toxicity to aquatic life
- chronic toxicity to aquatic life
* increases the severity of liver damage in rats.
* induces hepatic cell proliferation and DNA synthesis.
* is an example
- chemical compounds
- foetotoxic
- organic compounds
- solvent
* is toxic and is harmful ifnot handled properly
- to central nervous system and liver
- very persistent in the atmosphere and can take decades to degrade
* probable human carcinogen and also causes damage to the liver and kidneys.
Common example
* Some common examples are amoebas, paramecium, and algaes.
* are carbohydrates, fats, and proteins
- clams, snails, slugs, and octopuses
- tetra ethyl lead, aromatics, and oxygenates
Follow example
* explain steps.
* illustrate types.
Holotype
* act as a reference point for taxonomic work.
* are reference specimens kept in museums as a guarantee of the definition of a species
- the specimens chosen as nameholders when a species or subspecies is first described<|endoftext|>### example:
Pacemaker
* Classify the different models and types of pacemakers.
* Many pacemakers automatically provide for a slower heart rate at night or when the person rests
- can automatically adapt their impulse rate to changing physiological conditions
* Most pacemakers have date-sensitive microchips.
* Some pacemakers also report on the performance of the patient's heart
- can increase the heart rate with activity
- discharge electrical impulses at a fixed rate, but most work on demand
* aid in maintaining a rhythm in hearts prone to arrhythmias.
* also vary on their type of pacing.
* are cardiac muscles
- electric devices that maintain a steady beat for people with heart disease
* are electronic devices used to help the heart beat more normally
- implants
- medical devices
- one of the first and most successful 'high tech' implanted medical devices
- radioactive and can explode during cremation
- the primary treatment for bradycardia, a heartbeat that is too slow
* deliver electric impulses to hearts that beat too slowly.
* help patients with slow heartbeats - a condition known as bradycardia.
* implants to treat cardiac patients.
* primarily prevent the heart from beating too slowly.
* use batteries as their energy source
- to work
- wires or leads to deliver the energy from the batteries to the heart | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### example | pacemaker:
Conventional pacemaker
* deliver a single pulse to trigger contraction of heart-muscle cells.
* provide electrical pacing only to the right side of the heart.
Pacesetter
* are exemplar.
* is an example
Precedent
* are examples
- subjects
- the building blocks of world government
* has a very important role in the common law.
Prototype
* are companies
- located in japans
- models
- product models that are used to represent, test, and iterate current design concepts
- video games.
* A 'prototype' is an original type, form, or instance of some thing serving as a typical example, basis, epitome, or standard for other things of the same category. Some prototypes are used to find defects
Quintessence
* are elements
- kernels
* can also decay into new forms of hot matter or radiation.
* makes up the constituent matter of the heavenly bodies.
* quantum field with both kinetic and potential energy.
* relate primarily to the outer spiritual bodies.<|endoftext|>### example:
Specimen
* Some specimens have brilliant colors, such as the pink of mushroom coral
- show an abscission zone , such as that along which a leaf detaches in living plants
- samples
- substances extracted from the body of a patient
* come from homes.
* exhibit behavior.
* grow in areas
- places
* have ages
- antibodies
- appearances
- arrangements
- buttons
- diameters
- different appearances
- eat food
- features
- heads
- historical values
- incomplete skulls
- natural color
- orderly arrangements
- ranges
- receptors
- shapes
- taste
- trunk diameters
* illustrate diversity.
* indicate behavior.
* possess sharp teeth
* preserve features.
* reach adult ages
- maturity
- sexual maturity
* represent genus
- same genus
* show characters
- considerable details
- damage
- extensive damage
- fungal damage
- growth
* use for tests
- in tests
* vary in weight.
* yield results.
### example | specimen:
Vaginal smear
* are smears
- useful for determining the stage of the estrous cycle
* can determine when a bitch is ready to breed
- distinguish between the follicular phase and the luteal phase
### exceedingly rare:
Gastrointestinal anthrax
* begins with ingestion of contaminated meat.
* is exceedingly rare.<|endoftext|>Excellence
* function of mutual inspiration and support in pursuit of a shared purpose.
* involves one's sense of identity.
* is achieved when individuals strive for their maximum potential.
* is an actuality, a reality justified by our goddess
- attitude that results in superior performance
- high standards
- performance that meets or exceeds real world requirements
- reducing health risks and showing positive impacts on the business
- said to be in the past or future
- something that is lasting and dependable and largely within a person's control
- the ability to do the exercises of success
* is the gradual result of always striving to be better
- wanting to do better
- measure for all our actions
- process of constantly working to make things better
- reward that lies beyond the comfort zone
- vital for international competitiveness and the advancement of knowledge
* language of the powerful, which effaces the social basis of that power.
* measure in relation to context, objectives and available resources.
* occurs when an instructional system provides each learner with a high level of challenge.
* process, a mode of thinking, and an ongoing exercise in planning and improvement.
* quality that is recognized by comparison.
* refers to the way in which leaders live and act in the executive of their vision.
* starts with leaders of character who engage in the entire process of leadership.
* state of being
- mind put into action
- mind, an attitude, revealed in a passionate impatience with mediocrity
* way of life.
* word heard often at good and great universities. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### excellence:
Academic excellence
* by-product of individualization.
* consequence of a values focused education.
* is also a quality that plays an important role in Arkansas Tennis
- an integral part of the liberal arts tradition
- how the young are being challenged
- key to the creation and maintenance of a world-class university system
* is the focus of learning and supports the total development of the student
- historical cornerstone of all fraternities and sororities
Moral excellence
* comes about as a result of habit.
* is achieved through dedication to honor and personal integrity
- good
- of a soul acting as a concordant total, brought to unity
Refinement
* is excellence
- improvement
- perfection
* occurs over time and through a myriad of circumstances and situations.
* refers to techniques which reduce the pain and distress to which an animal is subjected.
### excellent anti-aging supplement:
Bovine colostrum
* contains five types of specific antibodies
- trypsin enzymes and protease inhibitors
* is also a rich source of immunoglobulins
- an excellent anti-aging supplement
- best when given fresh, but frozen bovine colostrum can be used
- ten times richer in immune factors than human colostrums
- the one colostrum which can be accepted by all mammals
* natural immune booster dietary supplement.
### excellent bedding plants:
African marigold
* Most african marigolds have flowers.
* Most african marigolds produce flowers
- yellow flowers
* are excellent bedding plants
- true annuals that can bloom all growing season if deadheaded | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### excellent energy source:
Colostrum
* acts as a laxative, helping babies pass their first stools.
* also contains a high level of antibodies against a variety of infectious agents
- certain enzymes known as trypsin and protease inhibitors
- large amounts of antibodies
* also has a laxative effect and starts the bowels moving
- the capacity to correct the low levels of serotonin, tryptophan and magnesium
- tremendous healing properties
- helps increase serotonin levels to brighten our moods
* also helps to burn fat for energy and build lean muscle tissue
- clean the meconium from the colon
- stimulates the passage of meconium
* are milk.
* builds the immune system and contributing growth factors.
* can be a clear fluid or a deep golden color
- bottle fed, or administered via stomach tube by a veterinarian
- hard to come by
- help heal the body at the cellular level and prevent the onset of certain conditions
- transmit the disease to calves of uninfected cows
- vary considerably from cow to cow
* contains antibodies that protect the calf from many diseases
- provide protection against disease
- critical nutrition, energy, and immunity needed for the newborn to start life
- fats, carbohydrates, white blood cells, protein, and antibodies
- high levels of immunoglobulins
- immunity factors that help protect the newborn infant from infections
- lower levels of lactose than normal milk
- many antibodies and increases the calves' resistance to disease
* contains more protein and less fat than regular breast milk
- protein, less sugar and much less fat than mature breast milk
* differs from normal milk in many ways.
* enhances the digestive system.
* fills a mare's mammary glands about two to three days prior to foaling.
* food and can be consumed by most people without any side effects.
* has a laxative effect which helps the baby pass stools
- lower fat content and smaller volume relative to mature milk
- an especially important role to play in the baby's gastrointestinal tract
- extra vitamins and protein and is very good for the calf
* has no drug interactions
- known drug interactions
* heals the bowel.
* helps build lean muscle
- prevent jaundice
- protect calves from disease and increases their chance of survival
- to strengthen the kid's immune system as it develops
* intake by dairy calves.
* is administered as powder and capsules.
* is also a powerful natural immune potentiator from mother mammals breast
- very effective laxative
- beneficial in stimulating the baby's first bowel movement
- excellent for helping to heal problems of the mouth
* is an excellent energy source
- exciting addition to the diet, a food which protects and promotes health
- immune enhancer
- important nutrient for the newborn
- bright yellowish thick milk secreted in the first three to six days after birth
- collected after the newborn calves have received enough for their needs
* is critical for baby lamb survival
- to the calf's ability to fight off disease
- dense with antibodies, proteins, antioxidants, and essential vitamins
- essential to prevent all early types of scour
- excellent for the immune system, candida, weightloss and many more
- extremely high in secretory IgA, a major immunoglobulin and anti-infective agent
- full of antibodies, which help the newborn fight infections
- heat treated and all milk is pasteurized
- heat-treated and milk is pastuerized
* is high in antibodies, energy and other nutrients
- protein, zinc and other minerals
- high-protein milk that's produced by the mother for a few days after giving birth
* is important because it nourishing milk that prevents diseases
- for prevention of most diseases of newborn calves
- instrumental in the protection against hypothermia and watery mouth
- known as the first milk from mammals to prepare the newborn for life
- mother's milk during the first few days of breastfeeding
- nature's first food
- now more likely to leak from breasts
- one of the most potent natural antibiotics
- produced by the udder immediately after parturition
* is rich in IgA synthesized by plasma cells of the intralobular connective tissue
- antibodies that provide the baby with protection against various infections
- antibodies, which can protect the calf from disease in early life
- immune factors
- protein and immune factors that can help the infant resist infection
- safe, even in large quantities
* is secreted by all lactating mammals shortly after giving birth, before milk is produced
- from the mammary glands before and shortly after parturition
- sensitive to heat
- so full of immune factors and life force for that very reason
- sticky
- super-saturated with hormones
* is the clear liquid that a mammal produces before their breast milk comes in
- dairy calf's primary source of nutrients
* is the first bacteria-free milk from a mammary gland after a normal dry period
- drawn milk from the mammary gland after parturition
- fluid secreted by lactating mammals
- milk a breastfed baby receives
* is the first milk produced by a mammal after giving birth
- mammals before the onset of lactation
- the ewe
- secreted after the baby's birth
- that a mother produces
- milk which is secreted during the first two or three days after parturition
- new mother's sweet, thick, first milk secretion
- perfect starter food for babies
- serum that comes just before mother's milk
- ultimate anti-aging, weight loss and immune supplement
- thick and creamy, is rich in protein but low in fats and carbohydrates
- thicker than breast milk, and is yellowish or creamy in color
- usually present in the milk glands by the middle of the pregnancy
- very concentrated and full of infection fighting agents
* milky color, very sweet and very sticky and stringy.
* natural laxative which helps with the baby's first bowel movements.
* offers safe viral and bacterial protection.
* powerful nutritional ally to help prevent illness even during an active flu season.
* premilk substance, which contains antibodies and white cells from the mother's blood.
* promotes homeostatic balance in the body, while antibiotics and steriods disrupt it.
* provides antibodies to many toxins, including bacteria, viruses and yeasts
- baby with an unequaled immunity against viruses and bacteria
* provides passive immunity for the newborn
- to disease and helps build up vitamin and mineral levels
- the antibodies that induce an initial resistance to disease
* stimulates myofibrillar protein synthesis in newborn pigs.
* strengthens the body's immune system.
* supports the human organism in two main ways.
* valuable source of antibodies for the new-born infant.
* whole, natural food, so there is no known health risk in trying it.
* works best on an empty stomach. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### excellent insecticide:
Liquid soap
* can be more useful than bar soap with young children.
* is an excellent insecticide
- located in cabinets
* mixes with water.
* solution of soft potassium soap dissolved in water.<|endoftext|>Exception
* are examples
- objections
- omissions
- pyrite, which is low in germanium, and sphalerite, which is low in both elements
- situations
- some carnivores where male can provide food and protection
* disprove theories.
* ensure activities.
* is an omission
* prove rules.
* require examinations.
+ Atom, Structure and parts, Electrons: Chemistry :: Nuclear physics
* Around the nucleus some electrons are further out than others. These are called 'electron shells'. In most atoms the first shell has two electrons, and all after that have eight. Exceptions are rare, but they do happen and are difficult to predict. The further away the electron is from the nucleus, the weaker the pull of the nucleus on it. This is why bigger atoms, with more electrons, react more easily with other atoms.
### exception:
Caption
* are exceptions
- information
- part of illustrations
- titles.
* given to map if latitude and longitude are used
* is an exception
+ Help:Tables, Special wiki table elements, Table caption
* Captions are displayed outside of the table.
### exceptional wildlife plant:
Japanese millet
* are millets.
* grows best in wet soils.
* is adapted to wetter soils than other annual grasses planted for forage
- an exceptional wildlife plant
* responds well to nitrogen fertilizer and manure.
### excessive sleepiness:
Hypersomnia
* can also occur without any identifiable cause.
* is excessive sleepiness
- increased sleep
- one of the symptoms of major depression
- usually hereditary, and depression is one of the side effects from a lack of sleep<|endoftext|>Exchange
* Most exchange traded funds grow incrementally as demand grows.
* Most exchanges occur across cell membranes
- permeable membranes
* Most exchanges occur in blood vessels
- tiny blood vessels
* Some exchanges occur across entire body surfaces
- at cellular levels
- during respiration
* Some exchanges occur in alveoluses
- gills
- lung alveoluses
* are captures
- commerce
- conversations
- group actions
- invitations to trade beneficial actions or goods
- physical trading locations
- social events
- the physical locations where stocks are bought and sold
- transactions
- workplaces
* database-driven transaction intensive application.
* facilitating body, rather than a funding organisation.
* involve removals.
* is how communities climb the ladder of culture
- motivated by risk sharing given random unobservable incomes
* is the defining concept underlying marketing
- prime basis of our economic life
- process of life and the process for development of potential
- software that runs on the server where the messages are stored
- trading goods and services with people for other goods and services or for money
* means a platform where a transaction is conducted between buyers and sellers.
* mode of cooperation that society uses to support itself and the individuals within it.
* natural phenomenon
- regions
- roots
* occur in tiny blood vessels
* promote diversity as well, and can be the only way of preserving certain plant varieties.
* reduces value since it consumes resources without adding to the physical supply of goods.
* represent activity relationships where resources are traded with an outside party.
* result in performance.
* service that is provided at no additional costs.
### exchange:
Anion exchange
* increases a water corrosiveness by removing alkalinity.
* is similar to conventional water softening.
* operates similarly to ion exchange water softening. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### exchange:
Cation exchange
* involves the replacement of the hardness ions with a nonhardness ion.
* is the solubility and exchange of elements.
* phenomena which is constantly going in soils and is of great importance.
* plays a role in other soil processes as well.<|endoftext|>### exchange:
Charge exchange
* can happen in conditions like when different objects are rubbed and separated.
+ Static electricity: Electricity
* Static electricity' means the increase of electric charge on the surface of objects. This electric charge remains on an object until it either flows into the ground, or loses its charge quickly by a discharge. Charge exchange can happen in conditions like when different objects are rubbed and separated. A static charge will only remain when one of the surfaces has a high resistance to electrical flow. The effects of static electricity are familiar to most people because they can see, feel and even hear the spark. This spark happens when the excess charge is neutralized. The familiar phenomenon of a static 'shock' is caused by the neutralization of charge.
Commodity exchange
* are highly organised markets.
* is an exchange
Countercurrent exchange
* is also important for preventing heat loss in the extremities
- important in respiration, temperature regulation and excretion
* leads to gradients for specific molecules from base to villus tip.
Economic exchange
* contain social components under normative theory.
* have an important role in the development of a stable East-West relationship.
* involves information and transaction costs that require real resources. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### exchange:
Gas exchange
* All gas exchange occurs through the integument.
* Most gas exchanges occur in regions.
* Some gas exchanges occur across body surfaces.
* Some gas exchanges occur across entire body surfaces
* Some gas exchanges occur across external body surfaces
* Some gas exchanges occur at capillaries
- cellular levels
- during respiration
* Some gas exchanges occur in alveoluses
- gills
- lungs
* can only take place if the skin is moist.
* happens in the alveoli.
* is accomplished by stomata, which have a pore that opens and closes
- by diffusion
* is carried on through stomata, small pores in the plant's surface
- out by simple diffusion
- completed by small pores in the leaf surface called stomata
- extremely important in maintaining homeostasis
- facilitated by the presence of stomates
- from tracheal tubes that go down into body through exoskeleton, book lungs, both
- inside the animal with sinuses
- part of breathing
- performed via gills located under the carapace
* is the movement of oxygen into the blood and carbon dioxide out of the blood
- way the body gets oxygen in, and carbon dioxide out
- through paired gills
* is via evaginations of the posterior gut
- gills, lungs, or the body surface
- the gills of the fetus being pressed up to the uterine wall
* occurs across the body wall
- surface of the tracheoles to the tissues immediately next to it
- at body surface
* occurs at the level of the air capillaries
- tiny ends of the tracheae
* occurs by diffusion through moist surfaces
* occurs by diffusion, aided by the movement of water through the sponge cavity
- thus the rate of gas exchange is dependent on surface area
- directly through their cell wall
- in lung through diffusion mechanism
* occurs in the air capillaries of the lung
- sacs where oxygen is exchanged with carbon dioxide
- alveoli deep in the lungs
* occurs in the alveoli of the lungs that provide a large surface area
* occurs in the alveoli, air sacs clustered at the tips of the tiniest bronchioles
- which are surrounded by a capillary network
- alveolus, where venous blood exchanges carbon dioxide for oxygen
- through the gills or the lining of the mantle cavity
* occurs via book lungs or tracheal tubes or both
- diffusion through the body surface
- within the gill tubes and on the outer tissue surface
* refers to the physical method that org.
* takes place across moist membranes
- by dififusion from sea water to the coelomic fluid inside
- in internal gills
+ Respiratory system, Ventilation: Physiology
* To inhale, the lungs expand, decreasing the air pressure in the lungs. As the air pressure inside the lungs are lower when it has expanded, air from outside at higher pressure comes rushing in to the area of low pressure in the lungs. Biology Made Simple'. The lungs are made up of many tubes or branches. As air enters the lungs, it first travels through branches called the bronchus, then through smaller branches called bronchioles, and finally into the air sacs. Gas exchange occurs in the air sacs where oxygen is exchanged with carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide in the air sacs now need to be exhaled, or breathed out. In the reverse process to inhaling, the diaphragm and the rib muscles relax, causing the lungs to be smaller. As the air pressure in the lungs is greater when the lungs are smaller, air is forced out. The exhaled air has a high concentration of carbon dioxide and a low concentration of oxygen. The maximum volume of air that can be inhaled and exhaled is called the vital capacity of the lungs and is up to five liters. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### exchange:
Gaseous exchange
* Some gaseous exchanges occur at levels.
* Some gaseous exchanges occur in alveoluses
- lung alveoluses
* are effected, since the kernel, itself a living body, continues to thrive.
* is also necessary for photosynthesis
- limited only by blood flow and surface area
* occurs through both the lungs and the skin
- the general body surface
* relies on simple diffusion.
Gift exchange
* is an integral part of Japanese culture.
* time-honored, popular tradition in Japan.
Home exchange
* concept right for our time making maximum use of existing resources.
* is an agreement between two partners on equal terms.
* mutual exchange of homes or holiday homes at the same time.
* trust building process.
Needle exchange
* are essential to stop the spread of disease through dirty needles.
* can in fact become a vehicle in helping people seek drug treatment.
* is, first and foremost, a method of disease prevention.
* legitimize failure, shackling human potential and promoting hopelessness.
* reduce the spread of infection, addressing the primary risk to women and babies.
Plasma exchange
* can lower viscosity in hours, whereas most chemotherapy requires days.
* is accomplished with a medical device called a blood cell separator.
Respiratory exchange
* Some respiratory exchanges occur in gills.
* occurs through the body surface.
Stock exchange
* act as auction houses.
* are exchanges
- office buildings
- stores
* is an exchange<|endoftext|>### exchange:
Stock market
* Stock Markets Watch the world stock market indicies.
* allow people to use their savings to buy stocks.
* are cyclical in nature
- exchanges for the buying and selling of equities, or shares, in corporations
- important to nearly everyone
- more than thermometers
- now a central source of capital
- open on business days around the clock, around the world
- part of economy
* are, the other joke goes, the country's only legal form of gambling.
* follow quarterly and annual earnings.
* form of legalized gambling.
* go up while the economy is still in recession.
* have virtually nothing to do with real investment by real businesses.
* indices Many investors like to keep track of how companies in general are performing.
* is an exchange
* leading economic indicator.
* rely on the infrastructure of banks and the payments system.
* reports Reports on the daily fluctuations of the stock markets.
* reward companies that take the long view.
* rise and fall based on long-term knowledge of corporate success
- fall, but individual stocks follow the success of the underlying business
* seem to go up and down on perception rather than reality.
* show remarkably little respect for people or their reputations.
* succumb to worries over profits and economic growth.
* tend to move in cycles, with periods when prices rise and others when they fall.
Switchboard
* are devices.
- on-line Internet directory
- online telephone book, for nationwide residential and business numbers
* is the most-searched online service for finding people
- site to use when looking for a person or a company
* national phone directory of individuals and businesses.
* people and business directory.
* site which compiles phone numbers from across the country.
Telephone exchange
* are geographic boundaries that define customer's local calling area.
* is work
Tradeoff
* are an important part of engineering security
- grist for the mill of economics
- inherent in the process of gathering evidence for health technology assessments
* is an exchange
* promote socioeconomic goals.
* shape the evolution of many important traits, especially life histories and aging. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### exchange:
Voluntary exchange
* gives people a broader range of choices in buying goods and services.
* is the only way one can obtain wealth in a free market.
* occurs when all parties to the exchange expect to benefit.
* plays a greater role in the allocation of goods and services.
* win-win situation since both parties expect to gain.<|endoftext|>### excision:
Surgical removal
* are excision
- surgery
* depends on whether the cancer has spread to local tissues.
* is curative for many orbital tumors including optic nerve glioma and meningioma
- just one of a number of ways in which they can be treated
* is the fibrosis
- only treatment for disfiguring or potentially cancerous papillomas
* is the therapy of choice for basal cell carcinoma
- squamous cell carcinoma
- treatment of choice for most functioning adrenal tumors
* remains the only form of therapy proven to prolong survival.
Excited state
* Most excited states decay very rapidly, others a little less so.
* are of higher energy
- stronger acids and stronger reductants than the original ground states
Excited trembling
* A trembling is motion
* Trembling is also manifestations of a weak heart
- an excited state
### excreted renally:
Excess phosphorus
* can increase algal growth, which can cause a greenish tint to the water
- interfere with the availability of copper and zinc
* is excreted renally.
* precipitates with iron, reducing available iron.
* runs off into lakes and streams and promotes algae growth, reducing water quality.
* stimulates the parathyroid gland to extract calcium from the bones.<|endoftext|>Exfoliation
* accounts partly for the rounding of many summits in the highlands.
* can help remove the dull skin, but only if the skin has been sufficiently loosened.
* coaxes the skin to rejuvenate itself as nature intended.
* is also important to keep dead cells buildup to a minimum
- like exercise for the skin
- one of the keys to healthy skin, as it helps in keeping pores clean and unclogged
* is the dominant process of physical weathering on the mountain
- removal of dull, dead surface skin
* normal process for skin cells.
* occurs as sheets or slabs of the cracked rock slip off and become further eroded
- when deeply-buried rock is exposed at the earth's surface by erosion
* removes all debris and dead skin cells
- the outer, dead layer of the skin
* softens and smoothes, keeping pores clear and ingrown hairs at bay.
* specific type of mechanical weathering that occurs in granite.
* type of physical weathering that occurs from rock pressure at depth.<|endoftext|>### exfoliation:
Dander
* are anger
- scales
* builds up during the dry winter months.
* causes most cat allergies and is produced regularly.
* common culprit in allergies to dogs.
* is exfoliation
- inside the hair follicle until it sheds, at which point the dander is in the air
- minute scales that fall from the hair, feather, and skin of all warm-blooded animals
- the microscopic particles of skin, fur and hair that animals continually shed
- usually the simplistic explanation of the cause of animal allergies
* tends to be more of a problem with dogs than cats, although it is common to both.
### exfoliation | dander:
Animal dander
* carries antigens that can cause allergic reactions in sensitive people.
* comes from having pets in the house.
* common allergen.
* consists of tiny flakes of skin shed by animals.
* is one of the leading causes of asthma.
* leading cause of allergy.
### exhilarating science:
Modern astronomy
* branch of graduate level physics.
* is an exhilarating science
- essentially physics applied to the study of celestial objects
- made up of several branches
* leans heavily on the concepts and techniques of physics and mathematics.
* uses all regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Existence
* All existence confluence of vibratory motions, from the cosmic to the atomic
- is vibration, and vibration is cycle and rhythm
* Any existence deprived of freedom form of death.
* applies to concepts as well as matter.
* belongs to the nature of substance.
* consists in perceiving or being perceived.
* continuum of endless change but of absolute and unchanging principles
- change, but of absolute fundamental principles and natural laws
* depends on causes
- rainfall
* exists and exists independently of consciousness
- is an axiom
* has designs
- values
* have their being in time, while essences are outside of time.
* is an axiom on which all knowledge begins
- life, never ending and ongoing, forever and ever eternal
- phenomenal, referring to how a thing appears to consciousness
- reality involved metaphysically and reality is existence involved epistemologically
* is the expression and outcome of composition and combination
- most universal concept which leaves nothing whatsoever outside it
- same as consciousness, and consciousness is existence
- setting from which human action arises
- totality of everything
- ultimate actuality of the thing
- what is invariably present in all the processes of knowing
* means the existence of entities that one can perceive.
* process of becoming that projects into the future
- progressively learning to obey higher law
* simple reason for the reproduction of organisms.
* stream, a series of waves, an eternal movement.
### existence:
Coexistence
* also exists in Spain and Southern Sweden.
* are being.
* baseline for human interaction, a starting point, a practical way forward.
* is the element which sustains peace
- key for the growth of the entire cosmos
* occurs if species evolve away from competition.
* often depends on each population establishing a different niche.
Human existence
* depends on memories from the past.
* depends upon compassion and curiosity
- the biological resources of the Earth
* has three aspects - physical, mental and spiritual.
* is all about change
- caught in a power play of hierarchical social structures
- dependent on the evolution of sustainable agriculture systems
- limited to a space between the macroscopic and microscopic
- shared existence
* is, by definition, a linguistically articulated existence.<|endoftext|>Exon
* are regions of mRNA that actually codes for the final protein.
* are spliced to allow a gene to encode different proteins
- together and form the coding sequence, and introns are spliced out
* are the part of the gene that are expressed, and the intron are the part that are cut out
- segments of DNA that actually code for the production of a specific protein
* divide proteins into structural or functional domains.
* includes atoms
- base pairs
* includes chemical chain
- groups
- genes
* represent sequences of DNA that are a. never transcribed.
### exothermic:
Combustion reaction
* Most combustion reaction gives off energy
- heat
* are exothermic.
* give off heat and light.
Exotic matter
* has negative energy.
* is stuff that weakly interacts with radiation
- the strange stuff that only weakly interacts with radiation
Exoticism
* is quality
* perpetuates racial stereotypes and draws a lock box around the person.
* well-recognized motive in American religious history. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### expensive illness:
Schizophrenia
* affects about one percent of the population at large
- almost all human mental activity, and the symptoms are extremely diverse
- both rich and poor but is more prevalent in lower socioeconomic groups
- men and women with equal frequency
* alone is fifty times more common than muscular dystrophy.
* also has a hereditary role.
* alters a person's behavior and thought processes.
* always involves a deterioration from a previous higher level of functioning
- deterioration and changes from a previous level of functioning
- requires treatment
* appears to be an amalgamation of many different disorders
- linked to the father's age at conception
- have a genetic component and seems to run in families
- occur in equal rates among men and women, but women have a later onset
* beats being alone.
* biological brain disease that affects thinking, perception, mood and behavior
- disease of the brain that ebbs and flows
* biologically-based disease of the brain.
* brain disease that affects thinking, perception and mood behavior
* can affect anyone regardless of gender, race, culture or intelligence
- appear in one of many forms
- be a devastating mental disorder
- develop suddenly or gradually and can affect people of any age
- occur in any family
- produce visual and auditory hallucinations, severe paranoia and other symptoms
* causes great strain on family members
- well-documented abnormalities across a wide range of cognitive abilities
* chronic and disabling brain disease
- condition that affects many aspects of an individual s life
* chronic illness that requires life-long treatment with medication
- lifelong treatment
- terror syndrome
* chronic, severe, and disabling brain disease.
* clinical disorder of the self model.
* common serious mental illness.
* complex disorder with few generalisations holding true for all people diagnosed
- mental illness that affects millions of people in Europe
* complicated and confusing condition
- disorder associated with high morbidity if left unmanaged
* debilitating illness affecting thinking.
* degenerative illness.
* devastating brain disorder and the most disabling of severe mental illnesses
- disease, but some individuals do get better
- disorder, and the most disabling of severe mental illnesses
* devastating illness that affects one percent of the American population
- mental illness that effects every aspect of a person
* difficult subject for which to raise money.
* disabling disease.
* disease of the brain that eludes simple definition
- human condition
* disease that afflicts the brain
- is indicated by disruptions in thinking, perception, and emotion
- with a physical cause, like cancer or heart disease
* disorder of major public health concern.
* disorder that can effect anyone
- usually occurs during a severe and extreme moment in ones life
* disorder which affects the thoughts and perceptions of a person
- thinking and perception
* does run in families.
* drastically affects individuals' quality of life
- people's quality of life
* eats identity.
* exists in all cultures in all countries.
* frequently occurs in young adults.
* generally develops during late adolescence or early adulthood
- manifests itself during late adolescence or early adulthood
* group of disorders characterized by unusual thoughts, emotions, and behavior.
* has a lot of potential different symptoms
- many contributing biological factors to the great amount of disability involved
- absolutely nothing to do with split personality disorder
- great human and economic costs
- many different forms and everyone responds to treatment differently
- no known cure
- nothing to do with multiple personality
- the least positive outcome of any of the major mental disorders
* heart-breaking malady.
* hereditary mental illness that often leaves a sufferer helpless.
* heritable brain illness with unknown pathogenic mechanisms.
* includes three so-called negative symptoms.
* is absolutely a chemical, and possibly a structural, brain disease
- almost nil in highland New Guinea where practically no grain is consumed
- also a disorder of brain development which affects children and adolescents
* is an expensive illness
- extremely complex mental illness caused by a biochemical imbalance in the brain
- illness that causes problems in thinking, feeling, and relating
- arguably the most terrible illness that has ever affected humanity
* is associated with both increased dopaminergic activity and perinatal complications
- excessively high dopamine production
- flu epidemics in a country
- believed to have a genetic basis
- called a formal thought disorder
* is caused by a very significant disruption of the dopamine system
- both biological and environmental issues
- principally by biological factors, most of which reside in the brain
* is characterized by a constellation of distinctive and predictable symptoms
- symptoms suffered for a number of months
- episodes of psychosis - being out of reality
- positive and negative symptoms
- considerably more disorganizing but can be confused with bipolar disorder
* is considered to be a disorder caused by a combination of factors
- survival mechanism thus the schizophrenic won t give it up
- multifactorially inherited
- diagnosed by the presence of two of the symptoms described above
- either an inherited brain disease or the result of neglectful parenting
- found all over the world
- generally more disabling
- incurable
- inheritable to some degree
- kept under control by anti-psychotic drugs
- made up of probably four or five different syndromes
* is more common in the lower social class
- than a terrible disease
- nearly synonymous with isolation
- on the more severe end of the spectrum
* is one of many possible diagnostic categories used in psychiatry
- the classifications used in diagnosing a mental illness
* is one of the most chronic and disabling of the mental illnesses
- common mental illnesses
- complex of all mental health disorders
- debilitating of all mental illnesses
* is one of the most disabling and puzzling mental disorders
- disease for young people
- misunderstood mental illnesses, doctors say
- puzzling, frightening, and expensive of the psychiatric disorders
- serious and disabling of the mental illnesses
- probably a multifactorial, polygenic disease
- quite a different thing than paranoia
- regarded as an illness with a biological component
- that which stops the flow
- the brain's most serious illness, and affects about one per cent of the population
* is the most common form of severe mental illness, affecting about one per cent
- psychological disorder
- disabling single illness for young people
- name given to a set of symptoms
- ultimate in psychological breakdown
- thus biological de facto
- treated mainly with the major tranquillisers
* is typically a catastrophic illness that begins in adolescence or early adulthood
- chronic illness, affecting thinking, originality and drive
* is, essentially, a disease which distorts thoughts and perception
- over-consciousness radiation
* leave varying degrees of residual impairment.
* lifelong illness
- infirmity
* major burden for families
- mental psychotic disorder
- psychiatric illness
- public health problem throughout the world
* malady that epitomizes the worst fears of having a mental disorder.
* man-made diagnosis, and doctors make mistakes.
* manifests itself in drastic ways.
* mental disorder in which people are no longer dealing with reality
- have an altered sense of reality
* mental illness that impairs thinking, perception and emotion
- which causes confusion, hallucinations, and mood swings
* neurobiological disorder that can be both debilitating and life-threatening.
* neurological disorder which results from an imbalance of chemicals in the brain.
* never goes away.
* normal and acceptable personality quirk.
* occurs at equal rates regardless of education, socioeconomic status, or culture
- worldwide in all cultures and across all socioeconomic classes
* often begins in men a few years earlier than in women.
* often starts out very slowly and progresses to a severely disabling mental illness
- strikes during adolescence
* persists despite the fact that the majority of victims never marry of have children.
* physical illness, just like diabetes or a broken leg.
* places a major economic burden on society.
* prevalent and complex disorder.
* probably has strong biological roots, but can be influenced by environmental stress.
* process of compiling lists and letting go of syntax.
* profoundly affects their health, happiness, and social life.
* ranks as one of the most common mental disorders.
* real and serious illness that affects one out of every hundred people.
* refers to a number of illnesses with similar features.
* remains prevalent and the symptoms are both devastating and heartbreaking.
* reveals itself gradually.
* runs in families, and is known to have a strong genetic component
* schizophrenia mental illness depression, bipolar.
* seems to be very rare before the age of six
- run in families, too
* serious brain disease of uncertain etiology
- disturbance of thought, perception, emotion and drive
- illness, one that has an impact on every aspect of the sufferer's life
* serious mental illness which affects one person in a hundred
- interferes with the way someone's mind operates
* severe and often enduring mental illness
- psychosis, with varied symptoms
* severe, significant psychiatric illness.
* shows no favorites occupationally or socioeconomically.
* strikes one in every hundred people
- roughly one in a hundred men and women
* suffers from very low public awareness.
* tends to come and go in cycles of remission and relapse
* term given to a complex group of mental disorders.
* thought disorder, where there disturbance in thought patterns and processes.
* tragic condition which strikes too many families throughout the world.
* tragic, chronic, and disabling mental illness.
* treatable illness but requires the taking of medication for long periods of time.
* type of psychotic disorder.
* typically becomes evident when individuals are in their late teens or early twenties
- begins in late adolescence or early adulthood
* typically develops at an early age
- in the late teens and early twenties
- manifests itself in young adult life and under times of stress
- runs in families, but can occur in a family with no history of it
* usually appears earlier in men
- for the first time in late adolescence or early adulthood
- begins with gradual onset during adolescence or young adulthood
* usually starts between the teens and the mid-thirties
- in the late teens or in the mid-thirties
- strikes in the late teen years or the twenties
* very common problem
- debilitating, but poorly understood, brain disorder
- insidious disorder, full of suffering, loneliness and unhappiness
- sad disease and in most cases the most feared psychological disease also
* yields new gene clues.
+ Schizophrenia, Likelihood
* Schizophrenia usually appears earlier in men. For males the symptoms usually start from 20 to 28 years of age, and in females it is 26 to 32 years of age. Symptoms that start in childhood, middle or old age are much rarer. Despite the received wisdom that schizophrenia occurs at similar rates worldwide, its rate of likelihood varies across the world, within countries, and at the local level. The rate of schizophrenia varies depending on how it is defined
- Outlook: Mental illnesses :: Psychosis
* Schizophrenia has great human and economic costs. The condition results in a decreased life expectancy of 12 to 15 years, primarily because of its association with being overweight, not exercising, and smoking cigarettes. An increased rate of suicide plays a lesser role. These differences in life expectancy increased between the 1970s and 1990s | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### expensive:
Probiotic supplement
* Many probiotic supplements use high pressure to form hard tablets.
* are expensive.
* work primarily in the intestinal tract. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Experience
* Every experience stimulates the production of neurotransmitter chemicals by the nervous system.
* affects ability
- both sensations and perceptions
- functions
- stimuli
- strategies
* are actual events a person has gone through
- fluid practices and processes that impact performances
- part of the totality of reality
- phenomena
- what make up lives
* based learning technology of the past.
* can be a synonym for wisdom
- change both the developing and the mature brain
- modify an instinctive response, especially as animals grow and mature
* changes life.
* comb which nature gives to men when they are bald.
* combines with expertise.
* contributes to evolution.
* creates beliefs.
* deals with situations.
* demonstrates ability.
* draws attention.
* form of human capital.
* give meanings to things, and each person's individual experience is different.
* has a crucial role in all human activities
- way of humanizing people and generating understanding
- an effect upon children's play
- development
- personal development
- significant impact
* helps darwin theories
- law students
- readers
- skills
* human phenomenon.
* illustrates aspects
- induction methods
* includes business development
- perception of physical phenomena, and is the basis for science
- smell
* indicates effectiveness.
* influences attitude
- behaviour
- expression
- gene expression
- responses
* involves tasks.
* is an alternative form of human capital
- empirical knowledge
- herbal fiber product that helps to clean the large and small intestines
- capable of increase knowledge
- complex consciousness of being, of self coexisting with all the nonself
- content
- education
- encoded in our brains as a web of fact and feeling
- food for the brain
- happening
- influenced by sensory perception and motor abilities
- knowledge derived from experiment
- names
- part of the process of building a belief system
- personal references
- primarily a result of what one chooses to perceive
- recurrent consciousness of sequences of self reexperiencing similar events
- shaped from within, since the entire universe exists within human consciousness
- structured in evolution by the universe as a whole
* is the beginning of wisdom, and of associating perceived phenomena
- capacity to read behaviour
- child of thought, and thought is the child of action
- common denominator upon which new people can be brought together
- food that feeds brain connections
- interaction of a person with their world and the feedback they receive from it
* is the major source of an individual s values
- and individual s values
- mother of thought, and religious experience is the mother of religious thought
- name everyone gives to their mistakes
- necessary connection between reality and meaning
- older adult's counterpart to formal schooling
- result of time and space being included in the nature of mind
- set of past jobs where people have learned functional aspects of a job
- source of knowledge
- use of other people's mistakes at a fraction of the cost
- way to perfection and knowledge
- thus transcendental relative to symbolic expressions of experience
- undergone as momentary, unconnected states of being
* is what causes a person to make new mistakes instead of old ones
- make new mistakes instead of the same old ones
- is shared in Deep Ecumenism
* mental act on the part of thinking and acting men.
* nondiscriminatory reason for wage disparity.
* plays a critical role in where drivers look and what they see
- major role when looking at representations
- role in constituting our phenomenal concepts and phenomenal beliefs
* produces many changes in the brain.
* promotes growth
- personal growth
* provides insight
- observations
- solutions
- valuable insight
* relates to outcomes.
* sculpts neural networks for language, vision, thinking and other capacities.
* shape societies, just as they do people.
* shapes the developing structure of the brain
- structure and function of the brain
- way circuits are made in the brain
* shows conclusions
- correct conclusions
- quality
- reaction
- regeneration
- results
* spans areas
- subject areas
* studies techniques.
* teaches managers
- product managers
- slave traders
* uniform mental activity.
* way of learning and people learn through experience.
* work environment which includes collective bargaining.
+ Oscar Wilde, Quotations: 1854 births :: 1900 deaths :: Bisexual people :: Bisexual writers :: Disease-related deaths in France :: Irish novelists :: Irish poets :: Playwrights :: Writers from Dublin
* Wikipedians learn only partly by lots of links. Most experience is developed by trial, error and practice. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### experience:
Aesthetic experience
* can be present both in the creation as well as perception of works of art.
* increase a child's awareness and encourage creative expression.
* is something to be learned as well as something instinctive.
Concrete experience
* emphasizes personal experience and feelings.
* is used to validate and test abstract concepts or 'theories'.
Conscious experience
* is constitutive of existence.
* living phenomenon and it has to be understood as such.
* occurs when afferent environmental patterns resonate with intrinsic patterns.
Creative experience
* can develop awareness and confidence in communication
- help children express and cope with their feelings
* help children to express and cope with their feelings.
Cultural experience
* can enhance the richness of life.
* play a major role in the development and expression of cognitive functioning.<|endoftext|>### experience:
Early experience
* affects the intergenerational transmission of infant abuse in rhesus monkeys
- strength of vigilance for threat in rhesus monkey infants
* are important in shaping the way the brain works
- thus vital to the formation and retention of synapses
- vital to the physical, emotional and spiritual development of the young child
* can result in a significant variation in the number of brain cell connections
- actual physical changes in brain functioning
* do affect long-term development.
* have a decisive impact on the architecture of a baby's brain
- architecture of the brain
* interact with natural instincts and shape the ability to learn later on.
* is an important concept in many fields of psychology
- important in forming attitudes which remain into adulthood
- known to affect mate preferences in birds
- the basis for strong supporting structures in a child's life
Educational experience
* affect reasoning skills.
* correspond to long-term adult outcomes.
Emotional experience
* includes all of the feelings of emotion.
* is the treasure of existence.
Good time
* increase population until it has little capacity to withstand bad times.
* is experience.
Historical experience
* influences attitude.
* proves that times of change are always times of risk.
* suggests that crises are the catalysts of change.
Human experience
* All human experience occurs in the context of culture.
* is both the starting point and the ending point of the circle of interpretation
- marked by incompetence, blunders, and acts of misjudgement
* is the starting point of all understanding
- subject of history
- tied directly to the many facets and levels of relationship
* pertains to one's doing or feeling.
Inner experience
* are the thoughts and feelings to an immediate phenomenon.
* is only one source of human knowledge.<|endoftext|>### experience:
Living
* Every living being continuously travels through Life Ocean of birth, life, death, and misery
- in the world is mortal
- needs food
* Every living being wants to experience the light of love
- stop suffering and find lasting peace and happiness
* are people.
* are used for eating
- enjoyment
- lovings
* can mean many things to many people.
* cause breathing
- dying
- expiration
- interaction
- old ages
- palpitation
- perspiration
- pollution
- respiration
- sadness
* is about growing, learning, giving, serving, and sharing
- sustained by feeding
* means moving so the living part even under the microscope moves except if it is dead.
* stems growing from the rhizome suppress rhizome bud growth. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### experience | living:
Active living
* comes to life in community settings of all kinds.
* contributes multiple health benefits to cancer patients.
* encompasses the entire experience of physical activity.
* is about individual well-being
- more than simply living actively
- social
* makes kids less likely to smoke.
* means taking things in stride - doing what comes naturally.
* places physical activity within a broader perspective of total fitness or well-being.
* way of life in which physical activity is valued and integrated into daily life.
Daily living
* is complicated by high unemployment and food and fuel shortages
- fraught with the threat of terrorism
- wedded to one's theology
* requires dealing with personal problems.
Healthy living
* guide to staying healthy and keeping fit.
* includes a variety of positive personal actions to prevent disease.
* is distorted when a single problem is the focus, and others ignored
- seen as a way to control major childhood health issues such as asthma and obesity
* leads to healthy loving.
* means a wise diet and appropriate exercise
- being active and eating well
- living longer with less to worry about
* primary means of disease prevention.
Independent living
* emphasizes a responsiveness to the needs of all persons with disabilities.
* has to do with self - determination
- self-determination
* is about choice and control
- choices
* means different things to different people.
* process of consciousness raising, empowerment and emancipation.
Primitive living
* is life on a model scale.
* metaphor for living.
* way of learning about nature by participating in it.
Residential living
* involves people, relationships, and experiences.
* is an experience in human relations.
* unique experience that provides opportunity for growth and learning.
Selfish living
* dead end street that ends in loneliness and despair.
* is destructive to harmony
- the great robber of healthy self-esteem
Simple living
* creates products where beauty comes with function and simple comes with style.
* is about designing our lives to coincide with our ideals
- living consciously and with a purpose
* says that a person needs only few and basic things to be happy.
+ Simplicity:
* He lives very simply. It uses the ideas of Henry David Thoreau or Epicurius or Diogenes as its moral goals. Simple living says that a person needs only few and basic things to be happy.
Social living
* can be a benefit when defending and looking after the young.
* is conditioned by power.
Sustainable living
* is deeply personal, based on individual definitions of quality of life.
* means conservation, low-impact construction, and careful development of land.
Urban living
* is about sustaining human contact
- an opportunity for people to connect
* puts more people in frequent contact, making it easier for viral infections to spread.
Musical experience
* depends on one's ability to listen.
* is another neglected field when it comes to electronic music.
Ordeal
* are experience
- trials
* is experience
Personal experience
* begin with children interacting with their own environment.
* flows naturally into shared experience.
* influence each individual's perception of death.
* is often the authority with all the things that can shape it.
* is the most important thing to change peoples' minds
- prime determinant of the status of a shaman
- upheld as the ultimate test of truth
Physical experience
* are important for children's development.
* develop the child's body coordination, balance, agility, and spatial awareness.
Positive experience
* boost the immune system.
* promotes growth.
Religious experience
* is the fact, of which all other dimensions are simply elaborations
- universally a part of the human condition
* is, above all, human experience. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### experience | reminder:
Memento
* are located in shelfs
- reminders
* horror film in the true sense of the word.
* is the story of a man suffering from short term memory loss.
Phylactery
* Phylacteries are boxes containing Torah passages
- is the Greek name, tefillin is the Hebrew, for leather boxes bound by a leather strap
* boxes with scriptures, worn during morning prayers.
Sensory experience
* Every sensory experience is bonded with emotions.
* includes smell.
* modifies short-term dynamics of neocortical synapses.
Shared experience
* are priceless moments in a family's development.
* is the basis of communication with others.
* provide the basis for intimacy.
Social experience
* affects the process and outcome of vocal ontogeny in two populations of cowbirds.
* develops emotions, behavior, etc.
* has a very strong influence over the development of singing.
Spiritual experience
* are good things to have.
* is impartial and nonpersonal.
* liberating source of women's identity and their resistance to oppression.
Successful experience
* lead to the development of positive self-esteem.
* provides insight
- valuable insight
Transpersonal experience
* have a very special position in the cartography of the human psyche.
* tend to be informative in a very global way.
Traumatic experience
* affects people's mental, physical and spiritual coping mechanisms.
* is likely to affect many aspects of our lives.
Visual experience
* are essential for the proper development of the brain circuits underlying vision.
* create the neuronal connections which wires the brain appropriately.
Work experience
* contribute to the growth of the whole person.
* has negative effects for all age and sex groups.
* is employment in diabetes patient education for compensation
- work experience whether paid or non paid
* learning experience for all students.
### experiential system:
Nonordinary reality
* consists of the interwoven fabric of experience of all beings.
* is an experiential system
- knowledge | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### experimental discipline:
Immunology
* Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
* Provides an introduction to cellular and clinical aspects of immunology.
* attracts people who get some sort of satisfaction out of complexity.
* central part of modern biomedical medicine.
* covers the study of all aspects of the immune system.
* dynamic field in which diagnostic approaches are rapidly expanding.
* field with importance throughout the medical community.
* has a pivotal contribution to make to biomedical research in the next millennium
- significant oral communication component
- strong foundation in biochemistry, molecular biology and cell biology
* is an experimental discipline
- the study how the body is able to protect itself against foreign substances
* is the study of all aspects of the immune system
- how the body is defended against disease
- the body's natural defenses against infectious disease
* is the study of the immune response to infection and other challenges in man and animals
- response of higher organisms to foreign substances
* plays an important role in tissue and organ transplant technology.
* rapidly growing field.
* science that examines the structure and function of the immune system.
* separate unit, and immunity to all diseases is discussed.
* studies our immune system and how it reacts to all sorts of different threats.
* uses the detection of antigens or antibodies to diagnose disease.
* well organized web site containing numerous immunology links.
+ Immune system, Adaptive immune system, Autoimmune disorders
* Immunology is the study of all aspects of the immune system. It is very important to health and diseases
- History of immunology
* Immunology is a science that examines the structure and function of the immune system. It originates from medicine and early studies on the causes of immunity to disease
+ Immunity, History of immunology
+ Immunology, History of immunology
### explore possibility:
Synthetic biologist
* are explore possibility.
* make use of DNA sequencing in their work in several ways.<|endoftext|>Explosive
* All explosives generate toxic fumes when detonated
- they detonate
* also are used to open navigation channels.
* are attacks
- chemicals
- grenades and mines
- inanimate objects
* are located in armies
- bombs
- construction sites
- fireworks displays
- war
- self-consuming at their detonation rate
* are used for blasts
- destruction
- digs
- kill
- moves
- terrorist acts
* are usually chemicals that make things blow up
- endothermic
- weapons
- widely available in China and are sometimes used by individuals with grudges
* become highly unstable with time and when exposed to the elements
- unstable with age, and can be detonated by the vibration of footsteps
* blast rocks and ores loose in mines and quarries.
* dissolve easily in water, making it difficult to extract the explosive molecules.
* form hot gases so rapidly because they have oxygen atoms as part of their molecules.
* found in old mines include dynamite and fuses and caps.
* work through chemical reactions understood through modern scientific study.
+ Hazard: Chemistry :: Safety
* A 'hazard' is something that can be dangerous. Fire is sometimes a hazard. Explosives are a hazard. Many chemicals can be a hazard. There are ways to get rid of hazardous things. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### explosive gas:
Propane
* also heats asphalt for highway construction and repairs
- is known as liquified petroleum gas
- requires lots of additional air for complete and efficient combustion
* by-product of gasoline, but it can also be extracted from natural gas
- natural gas processing and petroleum refining
* byproduct of natural gas processing and petroleum refining
- petroleum refining and natural gas production
* can also result in tailpipe emission benefits similar to a compressed natural gas
- be either a liquid or a gas
- improve air quality and readily available fuel
- leak, posing a risk of fire, explosion, and burn injuries
* clean burning fuel, producing water vapour and carbon dioxide as waste products.
* clean, safe and economical energy source.
* comes from natural gas and petroleum wells.
* comes in bottles or tanks, requiring replacement or refilling at some point
- disposable tanks
- high pressure canisters
* common fuel used for cooking and heating.
* contains no aromatic compounds, and produces no benzene and particulate emissions
- three carbon atoms and eight hydrogen atoms
* creates enormous heat so the burns can be very deep or even lethal.
* derivative of natural gas processing and crude oil refining.
* even reduces emissions in vehicles without emission control devices.
* fine fuel for cars and trucks.
- at room temperature and ordinary pressure
* has a low flammability range
- narrow range of flammability when compared with other petroleum products
- slight dipole moment because it is bent
- greater freezing speeds making vitrification possible
- the following vapor pressures
* has the lowest flammability range of any alternative fuel
- rating of any alternative fuel
* has three carbon atoms chained together
- lined up in a row
* is actually a commonly used propellant
- alkane
- almost one third the cost of petrol
- also a small industry
- an explosive gas
- another gas that can be used as a transportation fuel
- available in the United States and Europe
* is both flammable and explosive
- odourless and colourless when produced
- called gasol
- cheap, basically safe and easily dispensed
- chemical compounds
* is clean and more efficient than electric heaters
- burning, hot and controllable
- clean, reliable, efficient and affordable
- colorless, odorless, tasteless, and non-toxic
- compressed by the compressor into the hot side or high pressure side tubing
- considered to be a generally safe fuel when stored and handled properly
- dangerous because it's highly flammable
- designated as a clean-burning alternative fuel under the Federal Clean Air Act
- easier to shut off quickly
- easy to transport and can be used in areas beyond the natural gas mains
- extracted from natural gasoline or from petroleum
* is heavier than air and can collect initially at low levels
- is highly volatile
- sinks
- methane and ethane
* is more abundant and cheaper than propylene
- dense than air
- expensive to run per hour
- normally a gas, but it's stored in liquid form on a vehicle
* is one of the group of liquefied petroleum gases
- most versatile sources of energy available
- such gas
- preferred when solid lines are used as the pressures are higher
- probably the ideal fuel for an experimental engine
- produced from both natural gas processing and crude oil refining
- safer because it can be better controlled than fossil fuel
- stored as a liquid under pressure in tanks and cylinders
* is the 'wonder drug' of the energy industry
- fuel used in hot air ballooning
* is the third member of the alkane series
- most common vehicular fuel today after gasoline and diesel
* is the third most widely used motor fuel in the world
- motor fuel, ranking behind gasoline and diesel
* is under a higher pressure and thus uses smaller orifices on the burner jets
- pressure so that it becomes a liquid and is stored in a pressurized tank
* is used as the fuel for operating the trainers
- elsewhere
* is used for fuel
- the cook stove, refrigerator, lights and water heater
- instead of natural gas on many farms and in rural areas
* keeps longer than gasoline or diesel.
* liquid gas, which means it is in a liquid state when it is compressed
- in the cylinder, but is burned as a gas
* offers slow evaporative emissions and virtually complete combustion.
* readily expands as the temperature rises.
* relatively safe gas that makes a flame that can reach up into the bag.
* requires a large volume of air to burn properly
- more pressure than gasoline to become a liquid
* runs cleaner than gasoline, causes less wear on the engine and propane stores much longer.
* safe, efficient, clean-burning fuel, and is recognized as a viable alternative fuel.
* stable and predictable fuel although it is also extremely flammable.
* versatile, clean burning fuel that has many applications in business and in the home.
* works well inside and has very little fumes. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### explosive gas | propane:
Liquid propane
* freezing agent much like dry ice.
* is highly flammable and dangerous if it escapes
- liquid fuel
- liquids
- used to heat hot air balloons
Chemical explosive
* account for virtually all explosive applications in engineering.
* are just things that burn, but burn very fast
- of two general kinds
### explosive | explosive charge:
Rocket propellant
* are the fuels and the oxidizers carried by the rocket for propulsion.
* is explosive charge
- highly dangerous and explosive
Gunpowder
* contains nitrates and sulfur compounds.
* is an explosive<|endoftext|>### explosive:
High explosive
* are applicable where truth and logic fail
- explosives
- unstable chemical compounds that are sensitive to shock
* detonate with a shock wave that travels faster than the speed of sound
- violent chemical reaction
* give off toxic gas and vaporize thin metal casings.
* produce more pressure than low explosives but low explosives are more safe to use.
+ Explosive material: Chemistry
* This classification depends on their rate of explosion. A low explosive is a material, which burns very fast, but does not explode generally. For exploding them, people mix them with high explosives. Sometimes, even a low explosive may detonate. A high explosive bursts and explodes very fast. High explosives produce more pressure than low explosives but low explosives are more safe to use. Military weapons use high explosives.
Hydrazoic acid
- extremely toxic , even more toxic than sodium azide
- hydride
- very explosive
+ Hydrazoic acid, Properties: Acids :: Nitrogen compounds
* Hydrazoic acid is very explosive. It is a powerful reducing agent. It is used to make other azides. It has an unpleasant smell
- Safety
* Hydrazoic acid is extremely toxic, even more toxic than sodium azide. It can make very bad headaches. It has a bad odor. It does not accumulate in the body
### explosive | low explosive:
Pyrotechnic
* are hazardous due to the nature of their explosive, flammable, or toxic tiller
- making
- most applicable in rural settings
* is indoor fireworks that make a dance quite a celebration
- the area of special effects devoted to explosions
* produce irritating and obscuring smoke.<|endoftext|>### explosive:
Primary explosive
* are very unstable and rapidly react to shock , friction , and heat.
* detonate by ignition i.e. a flame, spark, impact, or other means of heat.
+ Explosive material: Chemistry
* Primary explosives are very unstable and rapidly react to shock, friction, and heat. Any shock, friction, or heat makes primary explosives to burn or blast fast. Secondary explosives are much more safe to use and do not react very fast to shock, friction, and heat. Any shock, friction, or heat may burn such explosives, but not make them to burst and blast. Some people call secondary explosives as base explosives. Some people also tell about another group of explosives.
Smokeless powder
* can either be single based or double based.
* is an explosive
- extremely flammable solid and can be dangerous if improperly handled
- used in muzzleloading firearms
Warhead
* are explosives
- mechanical devices
* come in a wide variety of designs, some only useful for special purposes.
* consist of nuclear materials, conventional high explosives, and related firing mechanisms. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### exponential curve:
Population growth
* Most population growth affects bear habitats
- has social consequences
- increases ability
- is in the developing countries of Asia, Africa, and Latin America
- occurs in years
* Some population growth depends on functions
- intensity
* Some population growth impedes economic development
- sustainable economic development
- involves interaction
* Some population growth leads to degradations
- depletion
- occurs in summer
- political issues such as land use, water distribution, education and food
* brings demands for more water.
* causes the appearance of more low-frequency variants.
* continues to be a problem in spite of recent declines in the birth rate.
* creates new economic opportunities and markets.
* declines because of death rate increase, birth rate decrease or both.
* depends on the rates of reproduction and mortality
- upon certain natural resources of which water is the most important
* direct result of space available.
* drives urban sprawl which adversely affects our lives in a variety of ways.
* exacerbates every environment and most social problems.
* factor that has an indirect affect on the destruction of the rain forest.
* forces the people to move to the rainforest.
* fundamental force underlying all others.
* global problem and it has to be tackled on a global basis.
* has consequences
- long-term benefits, though added people are a burden in the short run
- nothing to do with economic growth
* impacts natural resources.
- national geopolitical stresses both internally and externally
* increases the burden on sewage treatment plants
- demand for automobile transportation
* is about more than the environment, of course
- also responsible for the loss of farmland all over the world
- among a handful of underlying causes leading to biodiversity loss
* is an exponential curve
- issue that people often don t like to talk about
- certainly one of the key problems facing developing countries
- concentrated among adults in their thirties and forties, and the elderly
- considered the most serious long-term problem for the environment
- controlled by using cerebral transfer to create new androids
- determined by each city's nutrient total
- directly responsible for unsustainable demand for resources
- encouraged for greater profits in the expanding global economy
- moderate due to very low fertility rates
- most rapid in the economically underdeveloped arid and semi-arid regions
* is one of the factors contributing to global warming
- leading contributors to environmental degradation around the world
- part of the complex process of modernization and development
- reduced by external migration
* is the first driving force of global change
- highest in the Arab world
- most important factor in the growth of domestic food demand
- other key factor leading to urban sprawl
- predominant cause of urban sprawl
- primary driving force extending and intensifying environmental degradation
- result of the plunging death rate and increasing life expectancy worldwide
- single largest determinant of future food needs
* leads to increased levels of resource depletion and population
* major concern for many countries around the world
- factor in road hazards and congestion
* makes urban civilization possible.
* makes waves in the distribution of pairwise differences
- pairwise genetic differences
* occurs in two ways, births and immigration
* power function.
* reaches plateaus.
* reflects food constraints, disease and parental preferences.
* remains the driving force for growth in world rice consumption.
* slows down year after year.
* taxes the earth's natural systems.
* tends to overwhelm any possible gains made in improving the human condition.
* translates into more children participating in athletics. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
Exposure
* Most exposure affects brain development
- oocyte maturation
- photosynthesis
* Most exposure causes cancer
- cell death
- lung cancer death
- occurs during childhood
* Most exposures occur through the bite of a rabid animal
- with inorganic lead
* Some exposure affects health
- public health
- spermatogenesises
- contributes to illnesses
- leads to respiratory diseases
- prevents diseases
- fitnesses
- responses
- stress responses
- the respiratory tract, kidneys, and liver
* also decreases the benefits of chemotherapy and other cancer treatments
- includes potential hazardous impacts or explosions, and toxic or irritating vapors
- is affected by the size and color of the room
- occurs by inhalation of dust and aerosols, particularly in occupational settings
* are often dependent on the ability of a radionuclide to migrate through the biosphere.
* begins in the womb through the mother's exposures to toxic chemicals.
* can affect the respiratory and nervous systems, and cause skin and organ damage.
* can also cause dizziness, lightheadedness, nausea, confusion, and headache
- skin, lung, blood, liver, and kidney problems
- irritate the eyes, nose, and throat
- lead to brain disease and convulsions
- occur when people eat fruit, drink coffee, or smoke cigarettes
* can also occur when people smoke cigarettes or breathe automobile exhaust
* can also occur when people use certain paints, paint removers, or adhesives
- certain paints, varnishes, or glues
- gasoline and other products that contain toluene
- gasoline or certain paints and cleaners
- nitrobenzene-containing paints and polishes
- products containing the chemical
- suppress the immune system
* can cause blindness and damage optic nerves and retina
- dizziness and lightheadedness rapidly leading to unconsciousness and death
- effects ranging from eye and lung irritation to death in humans
- headaches and loss of sense of smell
- irritation of the eyes, nose, mouth, and throat
- lung disease and related ailments
- non-malignant lung diseases as well as lung cancer
* can damage the brain and nervous system
- liver and kidneys
- liver, kidneys, hearing and the sense of balance
* can irritate the eyes, nose, and throat
- skin, nose, and throat
- nose, throat, and eyes
- skin, nose, throat, and eyes
* can lead to absorption of uranium, mostly through inhalation and ingestion
- infertility and result in birth defects
- lung cancer, especially for smokers
- silicosis and other lung diseases
* can occur by a number of different pathways including normal diet and drinking water
- breathing it in, by ingestion, or by absorbing it through the skin
- dermally, by inhalation or by ingestion
- from water used for drinking, showering, and other common household purposes
- in three general ways, ingestion, skin contact and inhalation
- result in tremors, salivation, vomiting, diarrhea and loss of coordination
* cans have consequences
- term consequences
* causes brain damage
- eye irritation
- permanent damage
* causes skin irritation
- pain, pruritis, redness, vesicles, necrosis and sloughing of epidermis
- throat irritation
* combination of film speed, shutter speed, and lens aperture.
* damages eyes.
* decreases effectiveness of automobile brakes.
* depends on factors.
* desensitizes people to violence.
* form of protection.
* has impact
- major impact
- one common denominator - the amount of RF energy and the distance from the human body
- term impact
* increase during the warm season since people are more active in the summer months.
* increases the risk of developing lung cancer, mesothelioma, or asbestosis.
* is abandonment
- below levels
- by ingestion and inhalation
- disclosures
- influence
* is known from the literature to predict, when people become active themselves
- to cause cancer
- light units
* is measured as the concentration of the chemical multiplied by the time of contact
- in seconds, minutes, or hours relative to inhalation or skin absorption
- more dangerous for children, because more of the mercury passes into their brains
- most common through inhalation although it can also occur through skin absorption
- part of the definition of risk
- photographic films
- photography
- physical events
- presentation
- related chiefly to any dust created
* is the amount of a substance that an individual came into contact with
- chemical the body contacts externally
- ionization caused by radioactive material
- light reaching the film
- or number of organisms present at a particular time
- controllable element of risk
- degree to which a company is affected by exchange rate changes
- factor that links toxicity and hazard
- link between ambient air concentrations and public health impacts
- only variable that humans can manage to reduce risks from toxic compounds
- product of the years of experience times the frequency per unit of time
- very important in surgery
- via contaminated skin of infected animals, which often are sheep or cattle
- views
- vulnerability
* key factor in determining risk.
* leads to health problems
* means contact between the hazardous substance and a person, population, or ecosystem
- pesticide contact mainly with skin, stomach, or lungs
* measure of the concentrations or persistence of a stressor within the defined system.
* necessary condition for cancer to develop.
- from lead's presence in air, food, water, soil, dust and paint
- if people inhale the spores
* occurs in the womb and via lactation
- work place, in recreational settings and at home
- over time
- primarily through dietary intake of maize and groundnuts
* occurs through contact with a chemical
- dietary consumption of contaminated cereals
* occurs when general partners become the financial managers of a limited partnership
- particles are inhaled
- people breathe gasoline vapors while filling gas tanks
- skin has direct contact with contaminated soil
* pathways The routes by which radioactive material can reach or irradiate humans.
* prime culprit in the accelerated aging of the skin.
* produces central nervous system depression.
* promotes effects.
* relates both to the amount and frequency of coming into contact with a specific chemical.
* results in injuries
- serious injuries | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
### exposure:
Acute exposure
* can also damage the liver, kidneys, and central nervous system in humans
- burn the skin, eyes, throat, and lungs
* can cause gastrointestinal tract upset and narcosis
- nausea, metallic taste, abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, and headache
- irritate the skin and mucous membranes in humans
- lead to death from respiratory and circulatory failure
- severely burn the skin and eyes
* causes damage
- eye and nose irritation, narcosis, incoordination, and loss of consciousness
- irritation, narcosis, and gastrointestinal tract irritation
- permanent damage
* irritates the eyes and air passages
- upper respiratory tract
- eyes, nose, throat and lungs
* short contact with a chemical.
Arsenic exposure
* can cause a variety of adverse effects
- increase cancer risk, cause skin problems, and blood and nerve disorders
- pose both long term and short term health effects
- result in lung, skin, intestinal, kidney, liver and bladder cancers
* is usually suicidal, homicidal, or occupational.
Brief exposure
* causes skin irritations with discomfort or rash.
* has impact
- term impact
Chemical exposure
* are either chronic or acute.
* can also damage cables and connectors
- result in changes that trigger the coagulation process
* is especially damaging to children.<|endoftext|>### exposure:
Chronic exposure
* can also cause sloughing of nasal mucosa.
* can cause liver damage
- permanent damage to the alveoli of the lungs
- damage the kidneys, liver, and lungs
* can lead to chronic bronchitis, wheezing, and build-up of fluid in the lungs
- lung changes evident on chest x-ray
* can produce damage to the liver and kidneys
- significant damage to the heart, lungs, liver, and kidneys
* can result in dermatitis and system effects
- perforation of the nasal septum
* causes fluorosis with symptoms of weight loss, malaise, and anemia
- weakness, pain in the extremities and hair loss
* damages the thyroid gland and nervous system.
* is exposure spread over a longer period of time
- linked to kidney, reproductive and neurological disease
- over a long period is usually necessary to experience a risk to health
* occurs over weeks or months.
* produces alopecia, peripheral neuropathy, seizures, and renal failure
Dermal exposure
* is possible when handling leaded gasoline containing ethylene dibromide.
* poses a significant risk to utility workers who install and climb poles.
* refers to contamination of the skin with the product.
Direct exposure
* can lead to headaches, blurred vision, nausea, and dizziness.
* leads to problems.
* reduces the rate of growth.
Excessive exposure
* can affect blood, nervous and digestive systems
- cause liver damage and other health problems
* can produce muscular tremors, uncontrolled mucous secretion, convulsion and coma
- serious, possible irreversible lung damage
External exposure
* can cause burns, radiation poisoning , and death.
* occurs when the radiation source is outside the body.
* result from radiation sources which are located outside of the body.<|endoftext|>### exposure:
Human exposure
* Most human exposures are the result of accidental or careless handling of grounded bats.
* appears to come mostly from food or occupational exposure.
* causes irritation of eyes, mucous membranes and skin.
* comes through the food chain, or exposure to contaminated water or air.
* is common because pesticides are used extensively
- from air, drinking water and food in addition to in the workplace
* is primarily due to inhalation
- in the workplace via dermal contact
- occupational via inhalation and dermal contact
- principally occupational
* occurs mainly by breathing contaminated air or ingesting contaminated food or drink
- primarily through numerous non-pesticidal uses of kaolin
- through food consumption or ground and surface water contamination
* results primarily from food. | {
"source": "generics_kb"
} |
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