question
stringlengths 6
188
| context
listlengths 1
1
| answer
stringlengths 0
1.42k
| citations
listlengths 0
7
|
---|---|---|---|
what is a pediatric pulmonologist
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Complete the CHOC Children’s Specialists Pulmonology Referral Request Form located at http://www.choc.org/referralguidelines. Fax ALL pertinent medical records to 855-246-2329 (855-CHOC-FAX) 3 | Page. To speak with a CHOC Children’s Specialist in Pulmonology, please call 714 -509-8622 September 30, 2015.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Preparing For Your Child's Visit. Thank you for choosing Weill Cornell Pediatrics! To facilitate the check-in process during your child's visit, we have posted important forms and information for you to read, complete and return to the physician's office prior to your arrival.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Pediatric Pulmonology Referral Guidelines. For appointments, please call the Patient Access Center at 888-770-2462 (888-770-CHOC) Complete the CHOC Children’s Specialists Pulmonology Referral Request Form located at http://www.choc.org/referralguidelines. Fax ALL pertinent medical records to 855-246-2329 (855-CHOC-FAX) 1 | Page. To speak with a CHOC Children’s Specialist in Pulmonology, please call 714 -509-8622 September 30, 2015.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: We use leading edge technologies including flexible fiberoptic bronchoscopy and pulmonary function testing (PFT), and our Weill Cornell Pediatric Sleep Center is dedicated to infants, children and adolescents. For more information about our programs and services, please see our Komansky Center web pages:\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: After completing fellowship training, they physician is fully trained to practice as a pediatric pulmonologist, and may seek board certification from the American Board of Pediatrics in the subspecialty of Pediatric Pulmonology.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Pediatric pulmonologists gain the necessary training to treat children for respiratory and related complications throughout many years of intense study and clinical practice. After graduating with a bachelor’s degree that is usually concentrated in the sciences, the student must attend four years of medical school.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: For appointments, please call the Patient Access Center at 888-770-2462 (888-770-CHOC) Complete the CHOC Children’s Specialists Pulmonology Referral Request Form located at http://www.choc.org/referralguidelines. Fax ALL pertinent medical records to 855-246-2329 (855-CHOC-FAX) 2 | Page. To speak with a CHOC Children’s Specialist in Pulmonology, please call 714 -509-8622 September 30, 2015.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Jump To Top. Our Pediatric Pulmonology practice provides diagnosis and comprehensive care for the full range of lung and respiratory disorders including asthma, chronic lung disease, cystic fibrosis, chronic cough, respiratory insufficiency, and sleep disorders.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: About Pediatric Pulmonology. Pediatric pulmonology is a highly specialized field of pediatric medicine focused on the care of infants, children and adolescents suffering from pulmonary disorders, such as lung disease and related conditions.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Pediatric pulmonologists are uniquely trained to care for pulmonary diseases in children. Because every facet of these diseases can differ from their counterparts present in adults, the necessity of seeking out treatment from a pediatric pulmonologist is paramount."
] |
Uniquely trained to care for pulmonary diseases in children.
|
[
"Passage 9",
"Passage 10"
] |
how far ahead should drivers look while driving?
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Step on the brake pedal and accelerator at the same time and see if the vehicle moves. 7. For an average driver, driving 55 MPH on dry pavement, it will take about _____ to bring. The vehicle to a stop: a. Twice the length of the vehicle. b.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Make sure you are in the correct lane well ahead of time. Look ahead, behind, and to each side of your vehicle. Be aware of other drivers and pedestrians. Signal your turn at least 100 feet ahead (about 10 car lengths) on city streets and 300 feet (30 car lengths) on open highways. Watch for and obey traffic signals, signs, and pavement markings that direct your movement.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: If a hill or curve keeps drivers behind you from seeing the vehicle within 500 feet, the rear reflective triangle should be moved back down the road to give adequate warning. c. You do not need to put out reflective triangles unless the vehicle will be stopped for 30 minutes or more.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: •within 15 feet of a fire hydrant or within 50 feet of a railroad crossing. •within 20 feet of a crosswalk at an intersection. •within 20 feet of a fire station driveway on the same side of the street, or within 75 feet of the driveway on the other side of the street. This color painted curb indicated that only short stops are permitted.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: To help you become better at scanning for hazards, here is a good routine to develop. Look up to 12 seconds ahead. In a 60km/hour zone this means looking up to 200 metres ahead; on a freeway at 90km/hour it is up to 300 metres. The next picture shows what this looks like at 50km/hour.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: This means keep your eyes UP and looking down the road. Many drivers focus on the road only 5 or 8 seconds ahead. You should be looking about 15-20 seconds ahead of your vehicle, farther if you can. This gives you the time to recognize and avoid most potential hazards before they become a problem.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: In city traffic, at least 1 1/2 -2 blocks ahead. On rural (country) roads about 4 blocks or 1/2 mile ahead.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The length of a football field. 8. You are driving a vehicle with a light load, traffic is moving at 35 MPH in a 55 MPH zone. The safest speed for your vehicle in this situation is most likely: a. 30 MPH. b. 35 MPH.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: scanning means taking in the whole scene 360 degrees around your car - including any blind spots. you need to scan constantly for hazards when you drive - look and listen for hazards. use a scanning routine: look up to 12 seconds ahead - at 60km/hour this is about 200 metres, at 90km/hour about 300 metres. look for change and movement in the traffic scene. check your mirrors every 8-10 seconds - outside and inside mirrors.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: One good rule for how much space you should keep in front of you is at least 1 second for each 10 feet of vehicle length at speeds below 40 mph. At greater speeds, you must add 1 second for safety. For example, if you are driving a 40-foot vehicle, you should leave 4 seconds between you and the vehicle ahead. In a 60-foot rig, you will need 6 seconds. Over 40 mph, you would need 5 seconds for a 40-foot vehicle and 7 seconds for a 60-foot vehicle."
] |
In a 60km/hour zone up to 200 metres ahead and at 90km/hour up to 300 metres.
|
[
"Passage 5",
"Passage 10"
] |
can a person live without adrenal glands
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The health of the adrenal gland can and will dictate the health and recovery of many types of chronic illness, though the topic can get confusing. The adrenal gland should make the necessary amount of hormones in a balance, without producing too much or too little.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 120 Characters remaining. 1 First, try and keep your question as short as possible. 2 Include specific words that will help us identify questions that may already have your answer. 3 If you don't find your answer, you can post your question to WebMD Experts and Contributors.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: People with preexisting conditions will have a harder time adapting to the lack of an organ. Your chances of adapting go down as you age as well. As to why could someone live without any of these organs, you'd have to know how the organs work, and how can the body adapt to the lack of them.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: People live without esophagus, without stomach, and without parts of their intestines. Depending on what organs you remove, the person will need different supplements of vitamins and minerals. You can live without a gallbladder. You can't live without a liver, but you can live with only a part of it. Obviously, you can live without your appendix.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: If you select Keep me signed in on this computer, you can stay signed in to WebMD.com on this computer for up to 2 weeks or until you sign out. This means that a cookie will stay on your computer even when you exit or close your browser which may reduce your levels of privacy and security. You should never select this option if you're using a publicly accessible computer, or if you're sharing a computer with others.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: One of the major hormones made by the adrenal gland is cortisol. Too much cortisol can cause symptoms of weight gain around the waist, poor sleep, fatigue, elevated blood sugars, menstrual irregularities, increased thirst, higher blood pressure and even more frequent infections.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Adrenal Gland Function. What Are The Adrenal Glands? No bigger than a walnut and weighing less than a grape, each of your two adrenal function glands sits like a tiny pyramid on top of a kidney (ad renal means over the kidneys).\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Without a cortisol replacement the body will not live nor survive for very long. I am here to let you and others know that yes one can live life without adrenal glands. I take a total of 50 milligrams(mg) of hydrocortisone per day (30 mg in the AM, 20 mg in the evening). Thus far, I have led a fairly normal life though I do suffer from fatigue (a side affect of the medication).\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: To emphasize how important this gland is, consider that the gonads (testicles or ovaries) of a man or woman could be removed and without any further medication that person would live. Without critical medical care, a patient would die shortly after the removal of the adrenal glands.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: exists and is an alternate of . It is very possible to live without adrenal glands, however, the patient that has had them removed will be required to take corticosteroids to make up for what's missing."
] |
No, a person can't live without adrenal glands.
|
[
"Passage 9"
] |
what is a common alcohol
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Alcoholism, or alcohol dependence, is a disease that includes these four symptoms: 1 Craving alcohol. 2 Loss of control -- not being able to stop drinking. 3 Physical dependence -- experiencing withdrawal symptoms such as nausea, sweating, shakiness, and anxiety after stopping drinking.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: July 2, 2007 -- Thirty percent of U.S. adults have experienced alcohol abuse or alcoholism, and fewer are getting treatment for alcohol use disorders than in the past. That’s according to a new study on alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence, which is commonly called alcoholism. The study, published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, is based on more than 43,000 U.S. adults who were interviewed in person between 2001 and 2002.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Welcome to the FAQ section. Here you can find the answers to most of your questions about alcoholism, alcohol abuse, alcoholics, and any other related topics. What follows are some of the questions (and their corresponding answers) you may have about alcoholism.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Monobutyl ethylene glycol ether. n-Butoxyethanol... Desiccants-Not alcohol but also have a strong affinity for moisture and will absorb relatively large amounts of water from the environment. Deliquescent salts include: Calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, zinc chloride, Carnallite and sodium hydroxide.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Yes, alcoholism is a habitual and frequently progressive disease manifested by the strong urge to drink regardless of its serious adverse consequences. Similar to other diseases, alcoholism has a clearly defined course and has relatively known symptoms.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Alcoholism, or alcohol dependence, is a condition marked by intense cravings and persistent drinking despite the occurrence of problems related to alcohol, such as getting into trouble and losing a job. Four common signs determine the alcoholics: craving, impaired control, physical dependence and tolerance.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: - Some fuel sytem products do not list alcohol in their ingredients, but instead may contain a chemical that has similar properties to ethanol. - Desiccants, like alcohol, also have a strong affinity for moisture and will absorb relatively large amounts of water from the environment. Deliquescent salts include calcium chloride, magnesium chloride, zinc chloride, Carnallite and sodium hydroxide.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: - Many alcohol (ethanol type) chemical names end in ol . E.G. ethan ol , methan ol. - Sometimes the common name of alcohol based ingredients is not so obvious. E.G. Carbon disulfide = Alcohol Sulfuris, Aromatic Spirit of Ammonia = Ammonia in alcohol.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Gas Additives categories that most likely contain alcohol include: Gasoline Water Removers-Fuel System Cleansers-Fuel Conditioners-Fuel Detergents-Fuel Stabilizers-Rust Inhibitors-Octane Enhancers -. Alcohol Fuel Test Kits will check both gas and liquid gas additive products. for ethanol/alcohol content.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: “Four common signs determine the alcoholics: craving, impaired control, physical dependence, and tolerance.” Yes. Alcohol-related problems can be avoided in most cases by drinking moderate amounts of alcohol. Two drinks per day for men and one drink a day for women are considered within safe levels."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
the __________ and __________ are the glands that stimulate reproductive cycles.
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A) is the process of releasing mature sperm cells into the lumen of the seminiferous tubule B) involves a kind of cell division limited to the gametes C) results in the formation of diploid cells D) uses mitosis to produce gamete cells. B.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The idealized cyclic changes in pituitary gonadotropins, estradiol (E 2), progesterone (P), and uterine endometrium during the normal menstrual cycle. Days of menstrual bleeding are indicated by M. FSH = follicle-stimulating hormone; LH = luteinizing hormone.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: A) blood levels of FSH fall off B) blood levels of estrogen and progesterone decrease C) blood levels of estrogen and progesterone increase D) the corpus luteum secretes estrogen.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: FSH stimulates the growth and recruitment of immature ovarian follicles in the ovary. In early (small) antral follicles, FSH is the major survival factor that rescues the small antral follicles (2–5 mm in diameter for humans) from apoptosis (programmed death of the somatic cells of the follicle and oocyte).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: It is caused by the rapid decline in ovarian production of progesterone and estrogen that occurs each cycle in the absence of a pregnancy. Menstruation occurs throughout a woman’s reproductive life in the absence of pregnancy. Menopause is the permanent cessation of menses (see Menopause). Average duration of menses is 5 (± 2) days. Blood loss per cycle averages 30 mL (normal range, 13 to 80 mL) and is usually greatest on the 2nd day.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Also, developing follicles produce the hormone inhibin, which inhibits FSH secretion but not LH secretion. Other contributing factors may include disparate half-lives (20 to 30 min for LH; 2 to 3 h for FSH) and unknown factors. Levels of estrogen, particularly estradiol, increase exponentially.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Question and answer. The __________ and __________ are the glands that stimulate reproductive cycles. A. testes. . . thyroid B. testes. . . ovaries C. ovaries. . . thyroid D. ovaries. . . thymus. The testes and ovaries are the glands that stimulate reproductive cycles. Expert answered| emdjay23 |Points 2484|.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) is a glycoprotein hormone found in humans and other animals. It is synthesized and secreted by gonadotropes of the anterior pituitary gland, and regulates the development, growth, pubertal maturation, and reproductive processes of the body. FSH and luteinizing hormone (LH) act synergistically in reproduction.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Hormonal interaction between the hypothalamus, anterior pituitary gland, and ovaries regulates the female reproductive system. The hypothalamus secretes a small peptide, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), also known as luteinizing hormone–releasing hormone.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: 1 In both males and females, FSH stimulates the maturation of germ cells. 2 In males, FSH induces Sertoli cells to secrete androgen-binding proteins (ABPs), regulated by inhibin 's negative feedback mechanism on the anterior pituitary. 3 In females, FSH initiates follicular growth, specifically affecting granulosa cells."
] |
Testes and ovaries.
|
[
"Passage 7"
] |
in what year did the spanish civil war
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Spanish Civil War. The Spanish Civil War, (Spanish: Guerra Civil Española), widely known in Spain simply as The Civil War (Spanish: Guerra Civil) or The War (Spanish: La Guerra), took place from 1936 to 1939.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The Spanish Civil War of 1936-39 was, at its inception, the last of the classical European workers' and peasants' revolutions -- not, let me make it clear, a short-lived uprising, a cadre-controlled guerrilla war, or a simple civil conflict between regions for national supremacy.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Eighty years on, Spain may at last be able to confront the ghosts of civil war. The conflict between Republicans and Nationalists that erupted in 1936 was distorted by Franco and largely neglected by later governments. Now a campaign is under way to open the first international museum telling all sides of the story.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The results. 1 The better organised and better equipped Nationalist forces won the war after Madrid was captured in March 1939. 2 Hitler's position in Europe was now strengthened since he had another potential ally in the right-wing dictator of Spain, General Franco.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Apart from the two world wars, the Spanish Civil War was the bloodiest conflict in the first half of the 20th century. It lasted two years and 254 days-from July 17, 1936, until March 28, 1939. During that time about 1 million people perished.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: While the anniversary of the end of the Spanish Civil War is an occasion to lament the tragic loss of life and ensuing four-decade absolute rule of one of the twentieth century’s most despicable despots, it is also an opportunity to remember that the sub-plots of this conflict extended way beyond Spain’s polarisation.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Spanish Civil War ('36-'39). The outbreak of civil war in Spain in 1936 was viewed in Europe and the United States as an ideological struggle between the forces of fascism, led by General Francisco Franco, and the forces of republicanism, called Loyalists.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Thereafter, the Spanish war, as it was nonchalantly called by a bored world in the late 1930s, became nothing but a war -- and a nightmare for the Spanish people. Army and people alike were now completely demoralized and utterly pessimistic, observes Josep Costa, a CNT union leader who fought on the Aragon front.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Mussolini was happy simply to flex his ideological muscle and consolidate fascism in the Mediterranean. But for Hitler, the Spanish Civil War was an ideal testing ground for tanks and aircraft that were just being developed as part of the German re-armament.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: On March 7 a civil war broke out in Madrid between communist and anticommunist factions. By March 28 all of the Republican armies had begun to disband and surrender, and Nationalist forces entered Madrid on that day. The number of persons killed in the Spanish Civil War can be only roughly estimated. Nationalist forces put the figure at 1,000,000, including not only those killed in battle but also the victims of bombardment, execution, and assassination."
] |
The Spanish Civil war was in 1936.
|
[
"Passage 7"
] |
what age can give hpv vaccine
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A: All girls and boys who are 11 or 12 years old should get the recommended series of HPV vaccine. The vaccination series can be started at age 9 years. Teen boys and girls who did not get vaccinated when they were younger should get it now.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: All of these vaccines help prevent infection by HPV-16 and HPV-18. These 2 types cause about 70% of all cervical cancers and pre-cancers, as well as many cancers of the anus, penis, vulva, vagina, and throat. Gardasil also helps prevent infection by the 2 types of HPV (HPV-6 and HPV-11) that cause most genital warts.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: All vaccines protect against at least HPV 16 and 18 that cause the greatest risk of cervical cancer. It is estimated that they may prevent 70% of cervical cancer, 80% of anal cancer, 60% of vaginal cancer, 40% of vulvar cancer, and possibly some mouth cancer. They additionally prevent some genital warts with the vaccines against 4 and 9 HPV types providing greater protection.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The vaccine can be given to both females and males to prevent HPV infection. This vaccine can prevent most cases of cervical cancer in females, if it is given before exposure to the virus. In addition, it can prevent vaginal and vulvar cancer in females, and genital warts and anal cancer in both males and females. Protection from HPV vaccine is expected to be long-lasting.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: All kids who are 11 or 12 years old should get the three dose series of HPV vaccine. Teen boys and girls who did not get the vaccine when they were younger should get it now. Young women can get HPV vaccine through age 26, and young men can get vaccinated through age 21.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The vaccination series can be started as early as age 9. HPV vaccination is also recommended for females 13 to 26 years old and for males 13 to 21 years old who have not started the vaccines, or who have started but not completed the series. Males 22 to 26 years old may also be vaccinated.*.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: A: Since 2006, HPV vaccines have been recommended in a three-dose series given over six months. In 2016, CDC changed the recommendation to two doses for persons starting the series before their 15th birthday. The second dose of HPV vaccine should be given six to twelve months after the first dose.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: HPV Vaccines. HPV vaccines can help prevent infection from both high risk HPV types that can lead to cervical cancer and low risk types that cause genital warts. The CDC recommends all boys and girls get HPV vaccine at age 11 or 12. The vaccine produces a stronger immune response when taken during the preteen years.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: There are about 40 different types. Young women can get the vaccine through age 26. Young men can get the vaccine through age 21, and, for some, even up to age 26. Teens who are 15 years and older, and young adults, will still need three doses of HPV vaccine. The HPV vaccine is also recommended for gay and bisexual men (or any man who has sex with men) through age 26.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Studies have shown that two doses of HPV vaccine given at least six months apart to adolescents at age 9–14 years worked as well or better than three doses given to older adolescents and young adults. Studies have not been done to show this for adolescents starting the series at age 15 years or older."
] |
For females 13 to 26 years old, for males 13 to 21 years old.
|
[
"Passage 8",
"Passage 6"
] |
what is ssn
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Collection of the SSN was either eliminated, a substitution made for the SSN (e. Overall, the report noted consistently high success rates in the 92 impact evaluations it conducted on 24 of the bank's 244 SSN projects.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Taxpayers who are in an adoption process may not be able to obtain a new or existing SSN for the child, and will need to request an ATIN in order to claim the child as a dependent or to claim the child care credit.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: What is Social Security? Social Security is the foundation of economic security for millions of Americans—retirees, disabled persons, and families of retired, disabled or deceased workers. About 163 million Americans pay Social Security taxes and 59 million collect monthly benefits. About one family in four receives income from Social Security.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: An SSN is a nuclear-powered general-purpose attack submarine. SSN is the US Navy hull classification symbol for such vessels; the SS denotes a submarine and the N denotes nuclear power.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: In the United States, a Social Security number (SSN) is a nine-digit number issued to U.S. citizens, permanent residents, and temporary (working) residents under section 205(c)(2) of the Social Security Act, codified as 42 U.S.C. § 405(c)(2).\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: You need a Social Security number to get a job, collect Social Security benefits and get some other government services. But you don't often need to show your Social Security card. Do not carry your card with you. Keep it in a safe place with your other important papers.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: A taxpayer who is not eligible to have a Social Security number must obtain an alternative Taxpayer Identification Number. Three different types of Social Security cards are issued. The most common type contains the cardholder's name and number. Such cards are issued to U.S. citizens and U.S. permanent residents.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The number is issued to an individual by the Social Security Administration, an independent agency of the United States government.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Social Security (United States) In the United States, Social Security is the commonly used term for the federal Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance (OASDI) program. The original Social Security Act was signed into law by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1935, and the current version of the Act, as amended, encompasses several social welfare and social insurance programs.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: New or Replacement Social Security Number and Card. Your nine-digit Social Security number remains your first and continuous link with Social Security. It helps us accurately record your covered wages or self-employment earnings. We also use it to monitor your record once you start getting benefits."
] |
It is a nine-digit number issued to U.S. citizens, permanent residents, and temporary residents under section 205(c)(2) of the Social Security Act.
|
[
"Passage 5"
] |
tire load index
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: P195/60R15 87S - The load index (87) is the tire size's assigned numerical value used to compare relative load carrying capabilities. In the case of our example the 87 identifies the tires ability to carry approximately 1,201 pounds. The higher the tire's load index number, the greater its load carrying capacity.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Use the tire size chart to find your tire size and see a tire selection that's right for you. Take care of your auto service and maintenance needs at a service center near you. Get discounts on oil changes and other popular auto services. Take a look at the coverage you get under Goodyear's service warranties.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Extra load P-metric tires will be branded extra load, and identified by an XL in their descriptions, as in P235/75R-15 XL. Light load P-metric tires will be branded light load, and identified by an LL in their descriptions, as in P285/35R-19 LL.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The first two digits (87S) represent the tire's load index and are followed by a single letter (87S) identifying the tire's speed rating. Using a P195/60R15 87S tire size as our example, the 87S at the end of the size represents the tire's service description. A service description identifies the tire's load index and speed rating. Service descriptions are required on all speed rated (except for Z-speed rated) tires manufactured since 1991.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Most standard light truck and passenger tires have tire load index ratings between 70 and 110, but drivers should consider a higher tire load index rating if they consistently haul heavy equipment. Below is a load index chart that converts common ratings into their proper load capacities. When choosing new tires, it's important to have a load index that is at least as high as the one listed on the sidewall or doorjamb placard. Learn more on how to read tire size.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Euro-metric commercial vehicle/van tire dimensions end in a C (signifying commercial), such as 225/75R16C. Differences in load capacities and maximum pressure are identified by their load index and the maximum load/pressure for single/dual applications branded on their sidewall. The example provided above is for single/dual applications of a 225/75R16C size tire.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: When looking at light truck (LT) or newer Special Trailer Service (ST) tires, there are two load indexes branded on the sidewall, separated by a forward slash. Using an LT235/75R15 104/101S Load Range C tire as an example, the load index is 104/101.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: INFO CENTER Load Index. The load index is an assigned number ranging from 0 to 279 that corresponds with the load-carrying capacity of a tire. Most passenger car tire load indices range from 75 to 105 - although some passenger tires carry more. Installers.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Tire load index determines the maximum weight a tire can safely support once it's properly inflated. As shown in the graphic above, this number is on the sidewall to the right of the tire size rating, but the load index can also be found on your vehicle's placard or in the owner's manual.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Buy the right tire in a few simple steps. Learn more about how it works. Learn more about Goodyear's tire technologies and tire specifications like speed ratings and load indexes. Find helpful tips for maintaining tires, repairing tires and more. From gas savings to driving in challenging conditions, we’ll help you face the road ahead. Get quick answers to common tire questions."
] |
The tire size's assigned numerical value used to compare relative load carrying capabilities.
|
[
"Passage 8",
"Passage 1"
] |
is a rigid type variable bound
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Note that if no upper bound is explicitly declared, the upper bound is Object. For each upper bound B: if B is a parameterized type or a type variable, it is created, (see ParameterizedType for the details of the creation process for parameterized types). Otherwise, B is resolved. Returns: an array of Types representing the upper bound(s) of this type variable.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: If a type variable t is referenced by a type (i.e, class, interface or annotation type) T, and T is declared by the nth enclosing class of T (see JLS 8.1.2), then the creation of t requires the resolution (see JVMS 5) of the ith enclosing class of T, for i = 0 to n, inclusive.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: However, as we will see, there are other good reasons too. This style of polymorphism is known as parametric polymorphism. We say that a function like f :: a -> a -> a is parametric in the type a. Here parametric is just a fancy term for works uniformly for any type chosen by the caller.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: as a promise that a function with this type will work no matter what type the caller chooses. Another implementation we could imagine is something like. f a1 a2 = case (typeOf a1) of Int -> a1 + a2 Bool -> a1 && a2 _ -> a1. where f behaves in some specific ways for certain types.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: ∑ k = 1 10 f ( k , n ) , {\\displaystyle \\sum _{k=1}^{10}f(k,n),}. n is a free variable and k is a bound variable; consequently the value of this expression depends on the value of n, but there is nothing called k on which it could depend.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Couldn't match type `a' with `Bool' `a' is a rigid type variable bound by the type signature for f :: a -> a -> a In the second argument of `(&&)', namely `y' In the expression: x && y In an equation for `f': f x y = x && y.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Free variables and bound variables. For bound variables in computer programming, see Name binding. In mathematics, and in other disciplines involving formal languages, including mathematical logic and computer science, a free variable is a notation that specifies places in an expression where substitution may take place."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
where is the exe for windows 7 backup located
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Note: Below assumes that the Windows 7 Boot Updater created a backup called bootmgr~1. However in some cases you many need to use the system backup copy which is located at \\Windows\\Boot\\PCAT\\bootmgr in every Windows 7 installation (however this backup does not have any Windows Updates applied to it).ote: Below assumes that the Windows 7 Boot Updater created a backup called bootmgr~1. However in some cases you many need to use the system backup copy which is located at \\Windows\\Boot\\PCAT\\bootmgr in every Windows 7 installation (however this backup does not have any Windows Updates applied to it).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Note: If you let Windows choose it will not backup Program Files, anything formatted with the FAT file system, files in the Recycle Bin, or any temp files that are 1GB or more. Select the files and folder to include in the backup. Also notice you can select the option to create an image of your local drive.oday we take a look at the Backup and Restore feature in Windows 7 that may be their best backup tool yet. Set the Backup. To set up a backup in Windows 7 open up Computer right-click on your local drive and select Properties. Then click on the Tools tab and click the Back up now button.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Windows XP stores all of your iPhone backup files in this location: C:\\Documents and Settings\\user\\Application Data\\Apple Computer\\MobileSync\\Backup. Windows Vista and Windows 7 backs up the iPhone files to here: C:\\Users\\user\\AppData\\Roaming\\Apple Computer\\MobileSync\\Backup.indows XP stores all of your iPhone backup files in this location: C:\\Documents and Settings\\user\\Application Data\\Apple Computer\\MobileSync\\Backup. Windows Vista and Windows 7 backs up the iPhone files to here: C:\\Users\\user\\AppData\\Roaming\\Apple Computer\\MobileSync\\Backup.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Description: Windows.exe is not essential for Windows and will often cause problems. The windows.exe file is located in the C:\\Windows\\System32 folder. Known file sizes on Windows 8/7/XP are 2,123,297 bytes (12% of all occurrences), 200,192 bytes and 11 more variants.The program has no file description.escription: Windows.exe is not essential for Windows and will often cause problems. The windows.exe file is located in the C:\\Windows\\System32 folder. Known file sizes on Windows 8/7/XP are 2,123,297 bytes (12% of all occurrences), 200,192 bytes and 11 more variants. The program has no file description.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Description: Backup.exe is not essential for the Windows OS and causes relatively few problems. The file Backup.exe is located in a subfolder of C:\\Program Files. Known file sizes on Windows 8/7/XP are 11,571,200 bytes (33% of all occurrences), 11,605,576 bytes or 1,670,656 bytes.Backup.exe is not a Windows core file. It is a file with no information about its developer.f Backup.exe is located in a subfolder of C:\\Windows, the security rating is 57% dangerous. The file size is 28,672 bytes (50% of all occurrences) or 1,335 bytes. The process is loaded during the Windows boot process (see Registry key:\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: If Backup.exe is located in a subfolder of C:\\Windows, the security rating is 57% dangerous. The file size is 28,672 bytes (50% of all occurrences) or 1,335 bytes. The process is loaded during the Windows boot process (see Registry key:f Backup.exe is located in a subfolder of C:\\Windows, the security rating is 57% dangerous. The file size is 28,672 bytes (50% of all occurrences) or 1,335 bytes. The process is loaded during the Windows boot process (see Registry key:\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: 1 If windows.exe is located in a subfolder of the user's profile folder, the security rating is 47% dangerous. 2 The file size is 566,272 bytes (9% of all occurrences), 291,978 bytes and 9 more variants. 3 Windows.exe is not a Windows system file.escription: Windows.exe is not essential for Windows and will often cause problems. The windows.exe file is located in the C:\\Windows\\System32 folder. Known file sizes on Windows 8/7/XP are 2,123,297 bytes (12% of all occurrences), 200,192 bytes and 11 more variants. The program has no file description.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: To fix this problem automatically on a computer that is running Windows Vista, click the Fix it button or link. Click Run in the File Download dialog box, and then follow the steps in the Fix it wizard. Note This wizard may be in English only.However, the automatic fix also works for other language versions of Windows.o fix this problem automatically on a computer that is running Windows Vista, click the Fix it button or link. Click Run in the File Download dialog box, and then follow the steps in the Fix it wizard. Note This wizard may be in English only.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Today we take a look at the Backup and Restore feature in Windows 7 that may be their best backup tool yet. Set the Backup. To set up a backup in Windows 7 open up Computer right-click on your local drive and select Properties. Then click on the Tools tab and click the Back up now button.In the Back up or restore your files window click the link to set up a backup.Windows will search for a suitable drive to store the backup or you can also choose a location on your network. If you backup to a network location you might need the password to the share.oday we take a look at the Backup and Restore feature in Windows 7 that may be their best backup tool yet. Set the Backup. To set up a backup in Windows 7 open up Computer right-click on your local drive and select Properties. Then click on the Tools tab and click the Back up now button.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: 1 If windows.exe is located in the C:\\Windows folder, the security rating is 67% dangerous. 2 The file size is 994,887 bytes (12% of all occurrences), 48,640 bytes and 6 more variants. 3 The application has no file description. 4 Windows.exe is not a Windows system file.escription: Windows.exe is not essential for Windows and will often cause problems. The windows.exe file is located in the C:\\Windows\\System32 folder. Known file sizes on Windows 8/7/XP are 2,123,297 bytes (12% of all occurrences), 200,192 bytes and 11 more variants. The program has no file description."
] |
The file Backup.exe is located in a subfolder of C:\Program Files.
|
[
"Passage 5"
] |
is what lactose
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: There is no reason for people with lactose intolerance to push themselves to drink milk. Indeed, milk does not offer any nutrients that cannot be found in a healthier form in other foods. Surprisingly, milk-drinking does not even appear to prevent osteoporosis, its major selling point.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Understanding Lactose Intolerance. Lactose intolerance is the inability to digest the milk sugar lactose, causing gastrointestinal symptoms of flatulence, bloating, cramps, and diarrhea in some individuals. This results from a shortage of the lactase enzymes which break down lactose into its simpler forms, glucose and galactose.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Medical Definition of lactose. : a disaccharide sugar C12H22O11 that is present in milk, yields glucose and galactose upon hydrolysis, yields especially lactic acid upon fermentation, and is used chiefly in foods, medicines, and culture media (as for the manufacture of penicillin)—called also milk sugar.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Lactose intolerance occurs when people don't produce enough lactase or do not digest lactose well. Lactose intolerance is not a milk allergy, which is a different condition that starts in infanthood and affects between 2 and 7% of children. People with lactose intolerance don't have to avoid dairy altogether and may be able to eat small amounts of lactose depending on their sensitivity to lactose.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Definition of lactose. : a disaccharide sugar C12H22O11 that is present in milk and yields glucose and galactose upon hydrolysis and yields especially lactic acid upon fermentation.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Lactose intolerance is a common medical condition that results in diarrhea, abdominal pain, and gas (flatulence) and is caused by reduced or absent activity of enzyme lactase. When there is a deficiency of lactase, the lactose in the intestine cannot be split for digestion.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Lactose intolerance is a condition in which people have symptoms due to the decreased ability to digest lactose, a sugar found in milk products. Those affected vary in the amount of lactose they can tolerate before symptoms develop. Symptoms may include abdominal pain, bloating, diarrhea, gas, and nausea.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Lactose intolerance is due to not enough of the enzyme lactase in the small intestines to break lactose down into glucose and galactose. There are four types: primary, secondary, developmental, and congenital. Primary lactose intolerance is when the amount of lactase declines as people age.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Lactose: The sugar found in milk. Lactose is a large sugar molecule that is made up of two smaller sugar molecules, glucose and galactose. In order for lactose to be absorbed from the intestine and into the body, it must first be split into glucose and galactose. The glucose and galactose are then absorbed by the cells lining the small intestine.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Also referred to as “milk sugar,” lactose is the disaccharide component in milk, composed of the monosaccharide components glucose and galactose. In order to digest lactose, a naturally-occurring enzyme, lactase, is required."
] |
Lactose is a large sugar molecule that is made up of two smaller sugar molecules, glucose and galactose.
|
[
"Passage 9"
] |
where is the met ny located
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, colloquially the Met, located in New York City, is the largest art museum in the United States and among the most visited art museums in the world. Its permanent collection contains more than two million works, divided among seventeen curatorial departments.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Home. The Met Store has retail stores in exclusive destinations around the Metropolitan area. Please use the dropdown menu to find the location nearest you. The Met Store also has retail stores throughout the world. Please use the dropdown menu to select a country.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The Metropolitan Museum of Art is the largest museum in the Western Hemisphere, one of the most iconic art museums in the world and one of New York City’s most visited attractions.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The Metropolitan Museum of Art is located on Fifth Avenue between 80th and 84th Streets, making it a perfect way to begin or end a walk through Central Park, or a stroll along Museum Mile: the Guggenheim, the Jewish Museum, Goethe House, and the Neue Gallerie are all within walking distance.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The Metropolitan Museum of Art is open seven days a week. Sunday through Thursday the museum is open from 10am until 5:30 pm. Hours are extended on Fridays and Saturdays, when the museum is open 10am to 9pm. Note that the galleries are cleared 15 minutes before closing time.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: After negotiations with the City of New York in 1871, the Met was granted the land between the East Park Drive, Fifth Avenue, and the 79th and 85th Street Transverse Roads in Central Park. A red-brick and stone mausoleum was designed by American architect Calvert Vaux and his collaborator Jacob Wrey Mould.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Opened in early 2012, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s revitalized American Wing (a.k.a. The New American Wing Galleries for Paintings, Sculpture, and Decorative Arts) is 30,000 square feet of open, skylit space showcasing one of the best and most extensive collections of American art in the country.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The Metropolitan Museum of Art was founded in 1870. The founders included businessmen and financiers, as well as leading artists and thinkers of the day, who wanted to open a museum to bring art and art education to the American people. It opened on February 20, 1872, and was originally located at 681 Fifth Avenue.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Every New Yorker has a favorite section of the Metropolitan Museum of Art but some pieces and collections are widely acknowledged as must sees: The Egyptian collection covers 4,000 years of history and includes mummies, sarcophagi, and displays of hieroglyphics and jewelry sure to excite kids and Indiana Jones fans.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The main building, located on the eastern edge of Central Park along Manhattan's Museum Mile, is by area one of the world's largest art galleries. There is also a much smaller second location at The Cloisters in Upper Manhattan that features medieval art."
] |
United States
|
[
"Passage 6",
"Passage 1"
] |
what is vet?
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A veterinary technician in Ethiopia shows the owner of an ailing donkey how to sanitize the site of infection. Veterinary medicine is the branch of medicine that deals with the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of disease, disorder and injury in non-human animals. The scope of veterinary medicine is wide, covering all animal species, both domesticated and wild, with a wide range of conditions which can affect different species.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 1. pertaining to domestic animals and their diseases. 2. veterinarian. veterinary technician a health care worker who is skilled in technical aspects of veterinary medicine and works as a professional assistant to a veterinarian or to any of various types of researchers and scientists.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Vet Center Call Center. 1-877-WAR VETS (1.877.927.8387) is an around the clock confidential call center where combat Veterans and their families can call to talk about their military experience or any other issue they are facing in their readjustment to civilian life.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Vet testing a dog for skin allergies. A veterinarian or a vet, is someone who gives animals medical treatment. They are doctors for animals. There are many different types of veterinarians; some work with small animals, large farm animals, or wild animals. Veterinarians learn to treat all animals, but sometimes work with a specific type.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: the study of the diseases of the skin of animals. veterinary drugs. medicines used in the treatment of animals. It is an important point in law that medicines used to treat animals should be registered by the relevant local authority, e.g. the Food and Drug Administration, for use in animals.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: We're unable to display your personalized MyAVMA content because you aren't logged into the website! Log in now to see News, Discussions and other content based on your personal interests. You'll also be able to connect with the AVMA Board of Directors and House of Delegates members from your state.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Vet Centers served a total of 219,509 Veterans, Service members, and Military Families in FY2015 and provided 1,663,011 no-cost visits for readjustment counseling, military sexual trauma counseling, and bereavement counseling services.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Career Planning. Veterinarians tend to the healthcare needs of animals, including pets, livestock, and zoo and laboratory animals. Most vets work in private clinics, treating companion animals, for example, dogs and cats. They diagnose illnesses and perform medical procedures.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: vet noun [ C ] (ANIMAL DOCTOR) B1 UK formal veterinary surgeon, US formal veterinarian a person with a medical degree trained to take care of the health of animals: The farmer called the vet out to treat a sick cow.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: vet noun [ C ] (ANIMAL DOCTOR) 1 B1 UK formal veterinary surgeon, US formal veterinarian a person with a medical degree trained to take care of the health of animals: › 2 UK also vet's the office where a vet works: › 3 US informal for veteran noun (= a person who has served in the armed forces)"
] |
It is someone who gives animals medical treatment.
|
[
"Passage 4",
"Passage 9"
] |
what is cross border associated party transaction
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Search Our Website. Cross Border Associates (CBA) is one of the world's largest international alliance of business advisers, legal and tax experts, professional consultants and entrepreneurs focused exclusively on cross-border business transactions. Our partners have assisted international business transactions in more than 50 countries.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Most cross-border trade payments are. handled through correspondent banking relationships. As volume. continues to grow, pressure is being exerted on financial institutions. and payment systems to improve the cross-border payment. process.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Visa, as a payment industry leader, is focused on increasing the. efficiency and reducing the cost of cross-border payments for. financial institutions and their clients. Cross-border trade is growing rapidly as more companies source. goods and services overseas.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Border Payment Costs, Risks and Efficiency. by Ebru Pakcan, Global Head of Payments, Citi Transaction Services. G. lobalisation is accelerating the flow of people, goods. and services, capital, energy and information across. country borders.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: This is driving. process efficiencies, but further disintermediating financial institutions from the. payment process and the financial supply chain. Today, cross-border payments are slow, inefficient and costly for banks and businesses.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Moreover, various intermediaries are involved in the. payment process, particularly through the widespread use of correspondent relationships. Consequently, the execution time for cross-border payments is substantially longer than for. domestic payments, which increases the float cost (in the absence of value dating).\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Most interest rate analyses begin with an appropriate reference rate or base indicator. For variable rate loans, this is typically the bank bill rate; for fixed rate loans, usually swap rates are applicable. Financing is mostly about margins. The key factor in determining interest rate margins is credit risk or the probability of default (which includes term to maturity). Factors such as liquidity, ranking (senior or subordinated) and early repayment have only limited impact compared with credit risk.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Cross-border trade is growing rapidly as more companies source goods and services globally. banks and domestic payment systems are typically linked together to move funds. improve the cross-border payment process. cross-border payments process and how a combination of forces are influencing its future.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: From their inception, in enforcing New Zealand’s transfer pricing rules, we have endeavoured to strike a balance between protecting the tax base and containing compliance costs. Our approach to financing costs is no different.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: We are a global network of business advisers, legal and tax experts specialising in cross-border mid-market Mergers and Acquisitions and all related services. ... and we are almost everywhere! Ensure a Smooth and Safe Cross Border Transaction. Cross Border Associates (CBA) is one of the world's largest international alliance of business advisers, legal and tax experts, professional consultants and entrepreneurs focused exclusively on cross-border business transactions."
] |
It is one of the world's largest international alliance of business advisers, legal and tax experts, professional consultants and entrepreneurs focused exclusively on cross-border business transactions.
|
[
"Passage 1"
] |
what is a clinical review
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Water, Glycerin, Glyceryl Polyacrylate, Butylene Glycol, SD Alcohol 30, Saccharum Officinarum (Sugar Cane) Extract, Vaccinium Myrtillus (Bilberry) Extract, Triethanollamine, Arbutin, Saliz Alba (Willow) Bark Extract, Polyporus Umbellatus (Mushroom) Extract, Menthol, Phenoxyethanol. 2/18/10.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: What are Clinical Practice Guidelines? The IOM (2011) defined clinical practice guidelines as statements that include recommendations intended to optimize patient care that are informed by a systematic review of evidence and an assessment of the benefits and harms of alternative care options..\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: clinical review definition, clinical review meaning | English dictionary. Search also in: Web News Encyclopedia Images. clinical. adj. 1 of or relating to a clinic. 2 of or relating to the bedside of a patient, the course of his disease, or the observation and treatment of patients directly. a clinical lecture, clinical medicine. 3 scientifically detached; strictly objective. a clinical attitude to life. 4 plain, simple, and usually unattractive.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Clinical Peer Review is the process by which health care professionals evaluate each other’s clinical performance. Clinical peer review is segmented by discipline. No inter-disciplinary models for clinical peer review have been described. Physician Peer Review is most common and is found in virtually all hospitals.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Page Content. Clinical research aims to advance medical knowledge by studying people, either through direct interaction or through the collection and analysis of blood, tissues, or other samples. A clinical trial is one type of clinical research that follows a pre-defined plan or protocol.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Clinical review articles, also known as updates, differ from systematic reviews and meta-analyses in important ways.1 Updates selectively review the medical literature while discussing a topic broadly.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: In 2011, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) defined a systematic evidence review as a scientific investigation that focuses on a specific question and uses explicit, prespecified scientific methods to identify, select, assess, and summarize the findings of similar but separate studies.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Article Sections. Traditional clinical review articles, also known as updates, differ from systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Updates selectively review the medical literature while discussing a topic broadly.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Clinical Trials & Clinical Research. Clinical research aims to advance medical knowledge by studying people, either through direct interaction or through the collection and analysis of blood, tissues, or other samples. A clinical trial is one type of clinical research that follows a pre-defined plan or protocol.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Use acids without alcohol and menthol, avoid Active serum, Pro-Heal serum and Hydra-Cool serum by Is Clinical. They have 3 good product in their range - Cleanser, Super Advanced serum with vitamin C and Youth eye cream. The rest of their line is a harmful expensive disaster."
] |
Of or relating to a clinic.
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 4"
] |
what is the ductus arteriosus
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: ductus. duct. ductus arterio´sus a fetal blood vessel that joins the aorta and pulmonary artery. ductus de´ferens the excretory duct of the testis, which joins the excretory duct of the seminal vesicle to form the ejaculatory duct; called also vas deferens. patent ductus arteriosus see patent ductus arteriosus.uctus. duct. ductus arterio´sus a fetal blood vessel that joins the aorta and pulmonary artery. ductus de´ferens the excretory duct of the testis, which joins the excretory duct of the seminal vesicle to form the ejaculatory duct; called also vas deferens. patent ductus arteriosus see patent ductus arteriosus.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The ductus arteriosus is a hole that allows the blood to skip the circulation to the lungs. However, when the baby is born, the blood must receive oxygen in the lungs and this hole is supposed to close. If the ductus arteriosus is still open (or patent) the blood may skip this necessary step of circulation.he ductus arteriosus is a normal fetal artery connecting the main body artery (aorta) and the main lung artery (pulmonary artery). The ductus allows blood to detour away from the lungs before birth.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. In the developing fetus, the ductus arteriosus, also called the ductus Botalli, is a blood vessel connecting the pulmonary artery to the proximal descending aorta. It allows most of the blood from the right ventricle to bypass the fetus's fluid-filled non-functioning lungs.ain article: Patent ductus arteriosus. Failure of the DA to close after birth results in a condition called patent ductus arteriosus and the generation of a left-to-right shunt. If left uncorrected, patency leads to pulmonary hypertension and possibly congestive heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is a heart defect that occurs when the ductus arteriosus (the temporary fetal blood vessel that connects the aorta and the pulmonary artery) does not close at birth.uctus arterio´sus a fetal blood vessel that joins the aorta and pulmonary artery. ductus de´ferens the excretory duct of the testis, which joins the excretory duct of the seminal vesicle to form the ejaculatory duct; called also vas deferens. patent ductus arteriosus see patent ductus arteriosus.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: An uncorrected PDA may lead to congestive heart failure with increasing age. The ductus arteriosus is a fetal blood vessel that closes soon after birth. In a PDA, the vessel does not close and remains patent (open), resulting in irregular transmission of blood between the aorta and the pulmonary artery.n uncorrected PDA may lead to congestive heart failure with increasing age. The ductus arteriosus is a fetal blood vessel that closes soon after birth. In a PDA, the vessel does not close and remains patent (open), resulting in irregular transmission of blood between the aorta and the pulmonary artery.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) is a congenital heart defect wherein the ductus arteriosus fails to close after birth. Early symptoms are uncommon, but in the first year of life include increased work of breathing and poor weight gain.n uncorrected PDA may lead to congestive heart failure with increasing age. The ductus arteriosus is a fetal blood vessel that closes soon after birth. In a PDA, the vessel does not close and remains patent (open), resulting in irregular transmission of blood between the aorta and the pulmonary artery.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Ductus arteriosus: A short vessel through which blood headed from the heart via the pulmonary artery to the lungs is shunted before birth.This blood is shunted away from the lungs and returned to the aorta. When the shunt is open, it is said to be patent. patent ductus arteriosus (PDA) usually closes at or shortly after birth, and blood is permitted from that moment on to course freely to the lungs. If the ductus stays open, flow reverses, and blood from the aorta is shunted into the pulmonary artery and recirculated through the lungs.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The ductus arteriosus is a wide muscular blood vessel joining the pulmonary artery (main artery to the lungs) to the aorta (main artery to the body).This connection allows blood to be diverted from the lungs into the aorta during fetal development since the baby does not breathe until after delivery.he ductus arteriosus is a wide muscular blood vessel joining the pulmonary artery (main artery to the lungs) to the aorta (main artery to the body).\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Medical Definition of DUCTUS ARTERIOSUS. : a short broad vessel in the fetus that connects the pulmonary artery with the aorta and conducts most of the blood directly from the right ventricle to the aorta bypassing the lungs.ADVERTISEMENT.New Latin, literally, arterial duct. First Known Use: 1811. a short broad vessel in the fetus that connects the pulmonary artery with the aorta and conducts most of the blood directly from the right ventricle to the aorta bypassing the lungs.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: In the developing fetus, the ductus arteriosus, also called the ductus Botalli, is a blood vessel connecting the pulmonary artery to the proximal descending aorta.ain article: Patent ductus arteriosus. Failure of the DA to close after birth results in a condition called patent ductus arteriosus and the generation of a left-to-right shunt. If left uncorrected, patency leads to pulmonary hypertension and possibly congestive heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias."
] |
A wide muscular blood vessel joining the pulmonary artery (main artery to the lungs) to the aorta (main artery to the body).
|
[
"Passage 8",
"Passage 10"
] |
what tax is the largest source of revenue
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: At that time fewer than 1 percent of people with the highest incomes paid income taxes. Nowadays, more than 100 million American households file a federal tax return each year, and those income taxes make up the federal government's single largest revenue source. 3 The income tax system is designed to be progressive.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Estate tax revenues made up 0.6 percent of total federal receipts in 2014. Another source of federal revenue is profits on assets held by the Federal Reserve System. These have grown from 0.9 percent of total revenue in 2005 to about 3 percent in 2014.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Customs duties are taxes on imports, paid by the importer, while excise taxes are taxes levied on specific goods, like gasoline. This pie chart below shows how much each of these revenue sources is expected to bring in during fiscal year 2015.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Nontax Revenues. Since counties and municipalities are creations of the state, their capacity to generate revenues is determined by specific revenue-raising authority granted to them under the Georgia Constitution and state law. Taxes constitute the largest source of general revenue for most local governments in Georgia.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The money that a government takes in is called revenue. The state of Georgia has a number of revenue sources, including several forms of taxes, fees, and lottery funds. Between 2008 and 2012, the total amount of state revenue averaged more than $16 billion each year.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: With all of its various games, the lottery has on average contributed (subtracting costs from the total proceeds) more than $700 million annually since the year 2000. The lottery is the state's third-largest revenue source, averaging 5 percent of total state funds each year.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Borrowing financed the remaining amount ($485 billion); future taxpayers will ultimately pay this deficit. The three main sources of federal tax revenue are individual income taxes, payroll taxes, and corporate income taxes; other sources of tax revenue include excise taxes, the estate tax, and other taxes and fees.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Almost half of all federal revenue (46 percent) comes from individual income taxes. The income tax is generally progressive: higher-income households pay a larger share of their income in income taxes than lower-income households do.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Federal Budget 101. Facebook Twitter. The federal government raises trillions of dollars in tax revenue each year, though a variety of taxes and fees. Some taxes fund specific government programs, while other taxes fund the government in general.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The individual income tax is Georgia's top revenue source, generating between 40 and 45 percent of the state's total revenue. The corporate income tax is a flat tax (6 percent since 1969) on the income that a corporation generates within Georgia. Companies are not taxed on income generated outside the state. This tax is typically Georgia's fourth-or fifth-largest revenue source and accounts for 3 to 5 percent of the state's total revenue."
] |
Federal tax
|
[
"Passage 1"
] |
define passive voice in english
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: passive voice. passive voice definition. One of the two “voices” of verbs (see also active voice). A verb is in the passive voice when the subject of the sentence is acted on by the verb. For example, in “The ball was thrown by the pitcher,” the ball (the subject) receives the action of the verb, and was thrown is in the passive voice.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 4. singular noun. In grammar, the passive or the passive voice is formed using 'be' and the past participle of a verb. The subject of a passive clause does not perform the action expressed by the verb but is affected by it. For example, in 'He's been murdered', the verb is in the passive. Compare active.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: It's important to study the passive voice to place the focus on the object of an action, rather than than the person doing that action. English students should learn how to use the passive voice for explaining processes and for business situations. Somebody made my car in Detroit. -> My car was made in Detroit.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The passive voice is a grammatical construction (specifically, a voice). The noun or noun phrase that would be the object of an active sentence (such as Our troops defeated the enemy) appears as the subject of a sentence or clause in the passive voice (e.g. The enemy was defeated by our troops).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: It's important to study the passive voice to place the focus on the object of an action, rather than than the person doing that action. English students should learn how to use the passive voice for explaining processes and for business situations. Here are some examples: Somebody made my car in Detroit.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: active voice. active voice definition. One of the two “voices” of verbs (see also passive voice). When the verb of a sentence is in the active voice, the subject is doing the acting, as in the sentence “Kevin hit the ball.” Kevin (the subject of the sentence) acts in relation to the ball.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: passive voice. (grammar) The form of a transitive verb in which its subject receives the action. The passive voice is sometimes criticized for de-emphasizing the actor. [is ... criticized is passive.] Many languages, including English, use auxiliary verbs in constructing the passive voice.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: In grammar, the voice of a verb, also called diathesis /daɪˈæθəsɪs/ and (rarely) the gender of a verb, describes the relationship between the action (or state) that the verb expresses and the participants identified by its arguments (subject, object, etc.). When the subject is the agent or doer of the action, the verb is in the active voice.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: In traditional grammar, the term passive voice refers to a type of sentence or clause in which the subject receives the action of the verb. For example, A good time was had by all.. Contrast with active voice.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: (In a long passive, the object of the verb in an active sentence becomes the subject.) See the discussion of the passive gradient in Examples and Observations below. Often the passive voice is formed by using the appropriate form of the verb to be (for example, is) and a past participle (for example, formed)."
] |
The form of a transitive verb in which its subject receives the action.
|
[
"Passage 7",
"Passage 9"
] |
what is raw agave syrup
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Agave syrup (also called agave nectar) is a sweetener commercially produced in Mexico, from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (also called Blue Agave or Tequila Agave), and the Salmiana, Green, Grey, Thorny, and Rainbow varieties.Agave syrup is sweeter than honey, though less viscous.gave syrup (also called agave nectar) is a sweetener commercially produced in Mexico, from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (also called Blue Agave or Tequila Agave), and the Salmiana, Green, Grey, Thorny, and Rainbow varieties.Agave syrup is sweeter than honey, though less viscous.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Agave Nectar Is Not A Natural Sweetener. Once upon a time, I picked up a jar of “Organic Raw Blue Agave Nectar” at my grocery store. It was the first time I’d ever seen the stuff in real life, and the label looked promising.After all, words like “organic,” “raw,” and “all natural” should mean something.gave Nectar Is Not A Natural Sweetener. Once upon a time, I picked up a jar of “Organic Raw Blue Agave Nectar” at my grocery store. It was the first time I’d ever seen the stuff in real life, and the label looked promising.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: One of the prime uses of agave before the rise of alternative sweeteners was in making tequila, the popular alcohol used in margaritas and other cocktails. In the process of making tequila, agave is fermented, which some see as a comparatively natural process to what happens to the agave syrup sold as a sweetener.gave is a desert plant filled with a liquid that can be harvested and used as a sweetener. This product, commonly called agave nectar or syrup, can be used in many different food and drink preparations.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Agave syrups are sold in light, amber, dark, and raw varieties. Light agave syrup has a mild, almost neutral flavor, and is therefore sometimes used in delicate-tasting dishes and beverages. Amber agave syrup has a medium-intensity caramel flavor and is therefore used in dishes and drinks with stronger flavors.ecause agave nectar dissolves quickly, it can be used as a sweetener for cold beverages such as cocktails, smoothies, and iced tea. Agave nectar (more accurately called agave syrup) is a sweetener commercially produced from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (blue agave) and Agave salmiana.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Definition: Agave nectar is sometimes called agave syrup or agave sweetener. Agave nectar has a taste and appearance similar to honey, making it a popular substitute for strict vegans and others who avoid honey. There are two kinds of agave nectar: dark agave nectar and light.efinition: Agave nectar is sometimes called agave syrup or agave sweetener. Agave nectar has a taste and appearance similar to honey, making it a popular substitute for strict vegans and others who avoid honey. There are two kinds of agave nectar: dark agave nectar and light.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: A relatively recent trend in raw food preparation is the use of agave syrup (also called agave nectar) as sweetener is called for in raw recipes. I am often asked about my views on this sweetener.hen I first switched to a raw food diet in 1995, agave syrup was unknown and was NOT USED IN RAW FOODS! I first learned about agave syrup back in 1999 or 2000 at a trade show for the health food industry, which I attend regularly to keep up with the latest in the health and nutrition field.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Wholesome! Fair Trade Organic Raw Blue Agave is a natural sweetener harvested from the core of the Blue Agave plant. Fair Trade Organic Blue Agave is a mild delicious syrup that is a ideal for sweetening beverages, oatmeal, pancakes, waffles, yogurt, cereal and more.air Trade Organic Raw Blue Agave is a natural sweetener harvested from the core of the Blue Agave plant. Fair Trade Organic Blue Agave is a mild delicious syrup that is a ideal for sweetening beverages, oatmeal, pancakes, waffles, yogurt, cereal and more.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Agave In The Raw™ is organic blue agave nectar, a delicious liquid sweetener that comes from the blue agave plant, native to Mexico.Agave In The Raw nectar is harvested from the center core of the blue agave plant. It is about 25% sweeter than refined white sugar so a little bit tends to go a long way.gave In The Raw nectar is made from liquid harvested from the core of the Mexican blue agave, a plant resembling a cactus. The nectar is produced in Mexico and bottled in the USA.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Because agave nectar dissolves quickly, it can be used as a sweetener for cold beverages such as cocktails, smoothies, and iced tea. Agave nectar (more accurately called agave syrup) is a sweetener commercially produced from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (blue agave) and Agave salmiana.Agave syrup is sweeter than honey and tends to be less viscous.ecause agave nectar dissolves quickly, it can be used as a sweetener for cold beverages such as cocktails, smoothies, and iced tea. Agave nectar (more accurately called agave syrup) is a sweetener commercially produced from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (blue agave) and Agave salmiana.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: To produce agave syrup from the Agave americana and A. tequilana plants, the leaves are cut off the plant after it has aged seven to fourteen years. The juice is then extracted from the core of the agave, called the pina. piñaecause agave nectar dissolves quickly, it can be used as a sweetener for cold beverages such as cocktails, smoothies, and iced tea. Agave nectar (more accurately called agave syrup) is a sweetener commercially produced from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (blue agave) and Agave salmiana."
] |
Is a sweetener commercially produced from several species of agave, including Agave tequilana (blue agave) and Agave salmiana.
|
[
"Passage 4"
] |
what type of doctor can do a muscle biopsy
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Polymyositis (PM) Diagnosis. As with other muscle diseases, a doctor diagnoses polymyositis (PM) by considering an individual’s history, family medical history and the results of a careful physical examination. This may be followed by some lab tests, perhaps of the electrical activity inside the muscles and usually a muscle biopsy.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Needle biopsy. During a needle biopsy, your doctor uses a special needle to extract cells from a suspicious area. A needle biopsy is often used on tumors that your doctor can feel through your skin, such as suspicious breast lumps and enlarged lymph nodes. When combined with an imaging procedure, such as X-ray, needle biopsy can be used to collect cells from a suspicious area that can't be felt through the skin.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Reasons for the Procedure. A muscle biopsy is performed to assess the musculoskeletal system for abnormalities. Various disease processes can cause muscle weakness or pain. These conditions may be related to problems within the nervous system, connective tissue, vascular system, or musculoskeletal system.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: It is most important to perform a muscle biopsy with a minimum of trauma to the muscle tissue in order to decrease the risk of causing disruption of the muscle architecture and to minimize the risk of introducing contraction band artifact.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: There may be other reasons for your physician to recommend a muscle biopsy. A muscle biopsy helps to determine the source of the disease process, ensuring initiation of the appropriate management. The following is a list of common conditions diagnosed by muscle biopsy: Muscular dystrophy (MD)\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Here's a look at the various types of biopsy procedures used to make a cancer diagnosis. Your doctor may recommend a bone marrow biopsy if an abnormality is detected in your blood or if your doctor suspects cancer has originated in or traveled to your bone marrow.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: A person with a suspected inflammatory myopathy is often asked to undergo a muscle biopsy, a procedure in which a small piece of muscle is removed for examination. This biopsy can enable the physician to pinpoint the diagnosis to a type of myositis.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Muscle biopsy. In medicine, a muscle biopsy is a procedure in which a piece of muscle tissue is removed from an organism and examined microscopically. A muscle biopsy can lead to the discovery of problems with the nervous system, connective tissue, vascular system, or musculoskeletal system. Contents.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Several categories of myopathies do not require muscle biopsy for a diagnosis. This section, accordingly, discusses circumstances in which a muscle biopsy is not required for diagnosis of a myopathy, rather than actual contraindications to muscle biopsy.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: When a clinical diagnosis of myopathy is considered, muscle biopsy is often required (for exceptions to this requirement, see Contraindications below). Muscle biopsy is a fundamental part of the evaluation of a patient with possible muscle disease, also known as myopathy."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what is the population of tacoma, wa?
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Current Asian Population in Tacoma,Washington 2016, 2015 with Demographics and Stats by age and gender. Learn more by clicking the Google or Facebook button below. Current Asian Population demographics in Tacoma, Washington 2016, 2015 by gender and age.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Explore 2010 Census data by or Example: 999 W. Riverside, Spokane WA.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Tacoma, Washington. Compare population statistics about Tacoma, WA by race, age, gender, Latino/Hispanic origin etc. CensusViewer delivers detailed demographics and population statistics from the 2010 Census, 2000 Census, American Community Survey (ACS), registered voter files, commercial data sources and more.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Tacoma, WA Profile. Tacoma, WA, population 199,638, is located in Washington's Pierce county, about 25.0 miles from Seattle and 27.2 miles from Bellevue. Through the 90's Tacoma's population has grown by about 10%. It is estimated that in the first 5 years of the past decade the population of Tacoma has grown by about 1%. Since 2005 Tacoma's population has grown by about 3%. Tacoma's property crime levels tend to be much higher than Washington's average level.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The 2016 Tacoma, Washington, population is 207,948. There are 4,181 people per square mile (population density). The median age is 35.7. The US median is 37.4. 44.43% of people in Tacoma, Washington, are married. 15.18% are divorced.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Here you will find a collection of links to information about Pierce County in the areas of criminal justice, demographics, the economy, local government finance, and human services. General information: Pierce County home page, Pierce County. Puget Sound Regional Council home page, PSRC.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Census 2010 and 2000 Interactive Map, Demographics, Statistics, Quick Facts. Compare population statistics about Tacoma, WA by race, age, gender, Latino/Hispanic origin etc.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The population density in Tacoma is 3909% higher than Washington. The median age in Tacoma is 5% lower than Washington. In Tacoma 66.27% of the population is Caucasian. In Tacoma 10.55% of the population is African American. In Tacoma 8.67% of the population is Asian.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Compare Tacoma, WA Demographics To Other Cities. Tacoma population breakdown by race. In Tacoma, 11.0% of people are of Hispanic or Latino origin. Please note: Hispanics may be of any race, so also are included in any/all of the applicable race categories above.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Tacoma (/təˈkoʊmə/ tə-KOH-mə) is a mid-sized urban port city in and the county seat of Pierce County, Washington, United States. The city is on Washington's Puget Sound, 32 miles (51 km) southwest of Seattle, 31 miles (50 km) northeast of the state capital, Olympia, and 58 miles (93 km) northwest of Mount Rainier National Park. The population was 198,397, according to the 2010 census. Tacoma is the second-largest city in the Puget Sound area and the third largest in the state. Tacoma also serves as the center of business activity for the South Sound region, which has a population of around 1 million people."
] |
207,948 in 2016
|
[
"Passage 5"
] |
what to bring to a notary public
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Sometimes you need to get a document notarized. Getting a document notarized means: 1 you sign the document in front of a notary public, 2 that you have shown the notary proof of who you are, and. you are signing voluntarily.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The Secretary of State charges $20 application fee and $20 testing fee and will not accept cash or credit cards. So you will need to bring a check or money order ($40) with you payable to the Secretary of State if you want to take the State Notary Exam! PLEASE BRING TWO NUMBER 2 PENCILS WITH YOU FOR YOUR EXAM.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: During the loan signing class, we will introduce a typical set of loan documents (65 pages), discuss all relevant documents and places for signatures and notary requirements. Finally, you will have a chance to complete the loan document signing before you leave.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: You do not have to be a client of the bank or office to use a notary public. Notaries are public servants.1. Bring the documents you need notarized, and proof of your identity. Do not sign the documents until the notary tells you to. The notary needs to check: 1 your identity, and. that you are signing the document of your own free will.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: That's it...no hassles, no other requirements. While other notary seminar companies claim to offer students a similar guarantee, most will require proof of pre-studies and will charge the student a site fee for re-taking the exam at the end of the class.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: While the exact qualifications differ from state to state, typically a Notary applicant should be at least 18 years old, be a legal resident of the state and not have a criminal record. Some states allow residents of neighboring states to become Notaries.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: In most states, no. Twelve states require Notary applicants to pass a test. States that require Notary exams: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Louisiana, Maine, Nebraska, New York, North Carolina, Ohio (not statewide but may be required by local judge or committee), Oregon and Utah.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Sometimes you need to get a document notarized. Getting a document notarized means: 1 you sign the document in front of a notary public, that you have shown the notary proof of who you are, and.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: This seminar prepares you for the State Notary Exam and there are no questions on the state exam directly concerned specifically with loan signing. If you are interested in becoming a Loan Signer, you may want to attend our How to Become a Wildly Successful Signing Agent Notary Certification Course (9am-5pm).\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Fewer than a dozen states require Notary applicants to undergo any training or education, although others strongly recommend that you obtain education on your own. States that require Notary training: California, Colorado, Florida, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon and Pennsylvania."
] |
1. Bring the documents you need notarized, and proof of your identity.
|
[
"Passage 4"
] |
how long should children be breastfed
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Even if they accept the benefits to a child of long-term breastfeeding, for most mothers in Britain today the concept is hardly practical, especially at a time when the Government is encouraging new mothers back to work with nursery vouchers and tax credits.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 'Baby-led weaning, as we call it, is allowing a child to come away from the breast on their own,' she says. By six months, only 25 per cent of mothers still breastfeed (file photo). 'This is what animals do-like cats feeding their kittens.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Getting ready for the birth of your baby is an exciting and busy time. One of the most important decisions you will make is how to feed your baby. Deciding to breastfeed can give your baby the best possible start in life. Breastfeeding benefits you and your baby in many ways. It also is a proud tradition of many cultures.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Married to acupuncturist Stephen, the 43-year-old breastfed her nine-year-old son Jamie until just before his sixth birthday, and six-year-old Oscar until he was four. Like most other long-term breastfeeders, she insists she took her cue from her children.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The rate of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) is reduced by over a third in breastfed babies, and there is a 15 percent to 30 percent reduction in adolescent and adult obesity in breastfed vs. non-breastfed infants. Approximately 75 percent of newborn infants initiate breastfeeding.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Breastfeeding is a natural and beneficial source of nutrition and provides the healthiest start for an infant. In addition to the nutritional benefits, breastfeeding promotes a unique and emotional connection between mother and baby.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: By six months, only 25 per cent of mothers still breastfeed. As a result, says Sinnott, 'it's not surprising most health professionals regard early breastfeeding cessation as normal'. Mother-of-three Rachel Maudsley, 37, finished breastfeeding her four-year-old daughter, Freya, just a few months ago.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: As such, choosing to breastfeed should be considered an investment in the short-and long-term health of the infant, rather than a lifestyle choice. Editor's Note: Updated parent information on breastfeeding will be available Feb. 27 on the AAP parenting website at www.healthychildren.org/breastfeeding.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: This recommendation is supported by the health outcomes of exclusively breastfed infants and infants who never or only partially breastfed. Breastfeeding provides a protective effect against respiratory illnesses, ear infections, gastrointestinal diseases, and allergies including asthma, eczema and atopic dermatitis.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: According to the Department of Health: 'Exclusive breastfeeding is recommended for the first six months of a baby's life. Beyond this stage, breastfeeding should continue for as long as the mother and baby wish.'."
] |
Six months
|
[
"Passage 10"
] |
how many weeks do you need to work for unemployment
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Warnings. 1 In most cases if you quit your job, you are not eligible for unemployment. 2 If you happen to procure work while you are earning unemployment you must report it.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: However, most people who have been laid off and who are in the work force for at least six months will qualify to collect unemployment benefits. 3. Make sure your past earnings meet the requirements. States usually require you to have earned a certain amount during a one-year base period to qualify. The base period is usually the earliest four of the five complete calendar quarters before you filed your claim. For example, for a claim filed in December 2012, the base period would be July 2011 through June 2012. 1 Depending on the state, you usually need to meet one of two stipulation.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Your claim will begin the Sunday of the calendar week in which your application is filed. Waiting more than a week to apply will delay the start of your claim, and no benefits will be paid for weeks of unemployment that pass before the week you file.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: 1 File online at unemployment.ohio.gov for immediate claim service 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 2 Service may be limited while the system is being updated nightly. 3 If you do not have access to a computer, visit your local library or OhioMeansJobs Center where computers are available for public use.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: You are eligible to collect unemployment for up to 26 weeks in most states. In order to collect unemployment, you would have to have worked a year and be eligible under ot … her terms as well.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: 1 If you are laid off, are out of a job due to a reduction in workforce (RIF), or are downsized, you will qualify in all states for unemployment, unless you fail to meet a different requirement.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: To file a new application for Ohio unemployment benefits, or to restart an existing Ohio claim, you can: 1 File online at unemployment.ohio.gov for immediate claim service 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 2 Service may be limited while the system is being updated nightly.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: You are allowed to make up to 50% of your gross weekly unemployment ben … efits before you start losing money from unemployment. IE...If you gross 100.00 a week from unemployment, you can gross 50.00 from a job and still get a full 100.00 from unemployment. If you make 51.00 from a job, you get 99.00...I would check out your states unemployment website for full details on your state. Hope that helps.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: How many hours a year have to work to collect unemployment? While some states may have a requirement for minimal hours worked, most require earnings during a specific base time period, usually 2 quarters in the first 4 of 5 completed c … alendar quarters.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: To file a new application for Ohio unemployment benefits, or to restart an existing Ohio claim, you can: 1 File online at unemployment.ohio.gov for immediate claim service 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 2 File by telephone at 1-877-OHIOJOB (1-877-644-6562)."
] |
26
|
[
"Passage 5"
] |
what can you use tree sap for
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: As tree sap flows through the sapwood part of the tree, it produces carbon dioxide. This creates positive pressure and if there are any wounds or holes in the sapwood, the sap will ooze out. This is how harvesting saps from trees is achieved; cut or create a hole.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: There are two kinds of sap, both water-based and containing minerals and hormones. Xylem sap contains additional nutrients, while phloem sap has sugar. Sap feeds the tree and also insects when it seeps from the branches. credit: Zoonar/O.Kovach/Zoonar/Getty Images.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Applying mayonnaise to the area is also said to remove tree sap. Another technique is to use citrus-based solvents and children's molding clay. Apply a small amount of the solvent and rub with the clay. It is abrasive enough to scrub off the sap (which has been broken down by the solvent) without damaging the paint.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: There are two types of tree sap, xylem and phloem. The main difference is that phloem carries sugars in addition to hormones, minerals and the like for the purpose of simple observation, any liquid that flows or oozes from the tree we call sap and understand what it meant.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Sap is a fluid transported in xylem cells (vessel elements) or phloem sieve tube elements of a plant. These cells transport water and nutrients throughout the plant. Sap is not to be confused with latex, resin or cell sap; it is a separate substance, separately produced, and with different components and functions.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: To remove the tree sap from your vehicle's surface, use finger nail polish remover on a cotton ball. After removing the sap, make a paste from water and baking soda to wash the affected area, then polish or apply wax.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Maple syrup is one of the most well-known uses of sap. Perhaps the most well-known use of sap is in maple syrup production, for use on pancakes, in candy, maple butter and other treats. Birch sap is also made into a drink, especially in eastern Europe. In the Eastern United States, Pennsylvania Dutch is one of several companies that makes birch beer soda.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Saps may be broadly divided into two types: xylem sap and phloem sap. Xylem sap (pronounced /ˈzaɪləm/) consists primarily of a watery solution of hormones, mineral elements and other nutrients. Transport of sap in xylem is characterized by movement from the roots toward the leaves.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Xylem sap. Xylem sap (pronounced /ˈzaɪləm/) consists primarily of a watery solution of hormones, mineral elements and other nutrients. Transport of sap in xylem is characterized by movement from the roots toward the leaves.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Spring and late summer are the prime seasons for sticky, gooey, tree sap. The stuff seems to ooze onto everything with ease. Getting it off, however, can be a whole different matter. Here are some sure fire methods for removing tree sap from just about anything."
] |
Applying mayonnaise to the area,citrus-based solvents and children's molding clay,apply a small amount of the solvent and rub with the clay.
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 1"
] |
circle math definition
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A circle is the locus of all points a fixed distance from a given (center) point. This definition assumes the plane is composed of an infinite number of points and we select only those that are a fixed distance from the center. (See locus definition .).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Definition of Circle Graph. A circle graph is also known as a pie chart. The graph is in the shape of a circle with different wedges that each represent a percentage of a total. These wedges often look like pieces of pie, which is why the circle graph is sometimes referred to as a pie chart.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: A circle is a type of line. Imagine a straight line segment that is bent around until its ends join. Then arrange that loop until it is exactly circular-that is, all points along that line are the same distance from a center point. There is a difference between a circle and a disk.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Strictly speaking a circle is a line, and so has no area. What is usually meant is the area of the region enclosed by the circle. See Area enclosed by a circle. Chord. A line segment linking any two points on a circle. See Chord definition. Tangent. A line passing a circle and touching it at just one point.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: In any circle, if you divide the circumference (distance around the circle) by its diameter (distance across the circle), you always get the same number. This number is called Pi and is approximately 3.142. See Definition of pi.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The circumference of a circle (the perimeter of a circle): The circumference of a circle is the perimeter -- the distance around the outer edge. Circumference = where r = the radius of the circleand pi = 3.141592...\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Please provide your email for a free trial as a Teacher or Student. This trial will be valid for the current academic year (2015-16). An email to this address includes the password to login to the full web application.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Definitions and formulas for the radius of a circle, the diameter of a circle, the circumference (perimeter) of a circle, the area of a circle, the chord of a circle, arc and the arc length of a circle, sector and the area of the sector of a circle Just scroll down or click on what you want and I'll scroll down for you!\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Creating a circle graph of your own is not difficult at all. For example, let's create a circle graph that represents how many students got each grade on the most recent test. First, collect the data. Here is the breakdown of grades achieved.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The radius of a circle is the distance from the center of the circle to the outside edge. The diameter of a circle: The diameter of a circle is longest distance across a circle. (The diameter cuts through the center of the circle."
] |
It is the locus of all points a fixed distance from a given (center) point.
|
[
"Passage 1"
] |
what cacti are in the savanna biome
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: South America also has savannas, but there are very few species that exist only on this savanna. In Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela, savannas occupy some 2.5 million square kilometers, an area about one-quarter the size of Canada. Animals from the neighboring biomes kind of spill into this savanna.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Fires are very common in savannas, but many of the plants and animals have adapted to this. Animals: Many animals live in savannas including elephants, hyenas, giraffes, lions, zebras and leopards. Other common animals include antelopes, gazelles, buffaloes, mice, moles, snakes, squirrels and kangaroos.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Insects such as termites and beetles can also be found in the savanna. Plants: The most common plants in a savanna are wild grasses. Savannas also have trees and shrubs scattered throughout the biome. Acacia trees and baobab trees are common in the African savanna. Major Cities: Cities located in the savanna biome include Lagos, Nigeria, Darwin, Australia and Khartoum, Sudan.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: A biome is a large ecosystem where plants, animals, insects, and people live in a certain type of climate. If you were in northern Alaska, you would be in a frosty biome called the Arctic tundra. If you jumped on a plane and flew to Brazil, you could be in a hot and humid biome called the tropical rainforest. The world contains many other biomes: grasslands, deserts, and mountains, to name a few.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Desert Plants. The limited amount of rain and the extreme daily fluctuations in temperature make life in the desert very difficult for plants. Despite the challenges plants face in this biome, there are many different types of plants that grow in deserts. Common plant types that are found include cacti, succulents, small shrubs, and grasses. To tolerate the conditions and increase chances for survival, desert plants have developed special adaptations.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Savannas are also known as tropical grasslands. They are found in a wide band on either side of the equator on the edges of tropical rainforests. Savannas have warm temperature year round. There are actually two very different seasons in a savanna; a very long dry season (winter), and a very wet season (summer). In the dry season only an average of about 4 inches of rain falls. Between December and February no rain will fall at all. Oddly enough, it is actually a little cooler during this dry season.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The animals of this biome have adapted to the cold, the lack of oxygen, and the rugged landscape. They include the mountain goat, ibex (wild goat), sheep, mountain lion, puma, and yak. All of them are excellent climbers, which means they can move freely in the steep, rocky landscape.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: One interesting plant that grows in the desert is the giant saguaro cactus. This cactus is unique because it has adapted so well to the desert conditions that it can grow to reach over 20 feet and live for more than 200 years. These cacti are able to survive for so long because of several well-developed adaptations.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Most of the plants you'll see in the desert are species of cactus. You might come across yucca, aloe, octillo plants, or the tall saguaro cacti. A few animals—mainly reptiles, like snakes and lizards, and amphibians, like frogs and toads—are well adapted to the hot desert.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Another type of tundra is the alpine tundra, which is a biome that exists at the tops of high mountains. Special features: This is the earth's coldest biome. Since the sun does not rise for nearly six months of the year, it is not unusual for the temperature to be below -30°F in winter."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
which is the general form of the equation of the circle shown?
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: But circle equations are often given in the general format of ax2 + by2 + cx + dy + e = 0, When you are given this general form of equation and told to find the center and radius of a circle, you will have to complete the square to convert the equation to center-radius form.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Thus, if A, B, and C are given distinct points in the plane, then the locus of points P satisfying the above equation is called a generalised circle.. It may either be a true circle or a line. In this sense a line is a generalised circle of infinite radius.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Write the equation of a circle in standard form given the radius and center. Write the equation of a circle in standard form given the equation written in general form. Determine what the center and radius of a circle are given the equation of the circle. Graph a circle.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: In the complex plane, a circle with a centre at c and radius (r) has the equation | z − c | = r {\\displaystyle |z-c|=r\\,} . In parametric form this can be written z = r e i t + c {\\displaystyle z=re^{it}+c} .\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Step 1: Write the equation of the circle in standard form (). If your equation is in standard form it will make it easier for you to identify the center and radius. If your equation is in the general form you will need to complete the square to both the x terms and the y terms as if they were two separate problems.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: From the equation, get the fixed point and the given distance. The general form for the equation of a circle is: (x - (h))^2 + (y – (k)^2) = r^2 That is needed to get the center and the radius. From the center point, find points that are r distance away and plot them.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: For other uses, see 360 degrees (disambiguation). A circle is a simple closed shape in Euclidean geometry. It is the set of all points in a plane that are at a given distance from a given point, the centre; equivalently it is the curve traced out by a point that moves so that its distance from a given point is constant.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The technique of completing the square is used to turn a quadratic into the sum of a squared binomial and a number: (x a)2 + b. The center-radius form of the circle equation is in the format (x h)2 + (y k)2 = r2, with the center being at the point (h, k) and the radius being r. This form of the equation is helpful, since you can easily find the center and the radius.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The equation of a circle is shown below. (x + 2)2 + (y + 3)2 = 25 Jade uses the following steps to sketch a graph of the circle. 1. Obtain the center (-2, -3) and radius 5. 2. Calculate and plot the points around the center using given radius 5. 3. Mark the point (-2, -3) on the coordinate axis.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The General Form of the equation of a straight line is: Ax + By + C = 0. A or B can be zero, but not both at the same time. The General Form is not always the most useful form, and you may prefer to use: The Slope-Intercept Form of the equation of a straight line: y = mx + b. or. The Point-Slope Form of the equation of a straight line: y − y1 = m(x − x1)"
] |
The general form of the equation of the circle is ax2 plus by2 plus cx plus dy plus e equal to 0.
|
[
"Passage 6",
"Passage 1"
] |
why does meiosis have two cycles instead of one
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Remember that the ultimate aim of meiosis is to produce a cell with half the original genetic material-so that it can fuse with a gamete of the opposite sex (e.g. egg cell) and together reconstitute the full amount of genes.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Actively dividing eukaryote cells pass through a series of stages known collectively as the cell cycle: two gap phases (G1 and G2); an S (for synthesis) phase, in which the genetic material is duplicated; and an M phase, in which mitosis partitions the genetic material and the cell divides. 1 G1 phase.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: These new combinations result from the exchange of DNA between paired chromosomes. Such exchange means that the gametes produced through meiosis exhibit an amazing range of genetic variation. Finally, unlike mitosis, meiosis involves two rounds of nuclear division, not just one.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The point of doubling the genetic material here is so that when the cell splits into two during mitosis, each daughter cell will have the original amount of genetic material (not the half it would get if the genetic material weren't duplicated preemptively).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: As soon as the cytoplasm divides, meiosis is complete. There are now four daughter cells — two from each of the two cells that entered meiosis II — and each daughter cell has half the normal number of chromosomes (Figure 7). Each also contains new mixtures of genes within its chromosomes, thanks to recombination during meiosis I.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The final cellular division to form two new cells, followed by Meiosis II. Meiosis I is a reduction division: the original diploid cell had two copies of each chromosome; the newly formed haploid cells have one copy of each chromosome.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: It is also known as the reduction division because it results in cells that have half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Meiosis I consists of four phases: prophase I, metaphase I, anaphase I, and telophase I. Figure 1: Recombination is the exchange of genetic material between homologous chromosomes.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: This separation means that each of the daughter cells that results from meiosis I will have half the number of chromosomes of the original parent cell after interphase. Also, the sister chromatids in each chromosome still remain connected. As a result, each chromosome maintains its X-shaped structure.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Most cells go through the 'cell cycle', which is both a preparation for cell division (by mitosis) and also mitosis itself. During the 'S' phase of the cell cycle, the genetic material of each chromosome is replicated, producing two 'sister chromatids' for each chromosome.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The first division (meiosis I) splits the male-and female-derived chromosomes apart (you have two chromosomes 1, 2, 3, etc., one from each parent). The second division splits the sister chromatids of each chromosome apart, almost like in conventional mitosis."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
hcm definition medical
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: hypertrophic cardiomyopathy an increase in heart muscle weight, particularly of the left ventricle and often involving the interventricular septum; it may affect the flow of blood from an atrium into the ventricle or out from the ventricle.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 1. hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-a disorder in which the heart muscle is so strong that it does not relax enough to fill with the heart with blood and so has reduced pumping ability. cardiomyopathy, myocardiopathy-a disorder (usually of unknown origin) of the heart muscle (myocardium). 1 Facebook.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: A heart defect characterized by increased thickness (hypertrophy) of the wall of the left ventricle, the largest of the four chambers of the heart.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: ADP Vantage. is the culmination of an 18-month research and development effort by ADP to create a unified, fully-integrated platform combining the pillars of human capital management: HR, payroll, benefits, talent management and time & attendance.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is associated with thickening of the heart muscle, most commonly at the septum between the ventricles, below the aortic valve.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: 1 Chest pain or pressure (occurs usually with exercise or physical activity, but can also occur with rest or after meals). 2 Shortness of breath (dyspnea) , especially with exertion. 3 Fatigue (feeling overly tired).\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: However, in a small number of people with HCM, the thickened heart muscle can cause shortness of breath, chest pain or problems in the heart's electrical system, resulting in life-threatening abnormal heart rhythms (arrhythmias). Find out why Mayo Clinic is the best place for your care.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Note that the heart walls (muscle) are much thicker (hypertrophied) in the HCM heart. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a disease in which the heart muscle (myocardium) becomes abnormally thick (hypertrophied). The thickened heart muscle can make it harder for the heart to pump blood. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy often goes undiagnosed because many people with the disease have few, if any, symptoms and can lead normal lives with no significant problems.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Cardiomyopathy (kahr-dee-o-my-OP-uh-thee) is a condition where the heart muscle is abnormal. The main types of cardiomyopathy include dilated, hypertrophic and restrictive cardiomyopathy. Cardiomyopathy makes it harder for your heart to pump and deliver blood to the rest of your body. Cardiomyopathy can lead to heart failure. Cardiomyopathy can be treated.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Many people with HCM have no symptoms or only minor symptoms, and live a normal life. Other people develop symptoms, which progress and worsen as heart function worsens. Symptoms of HCM can occur at any age and may include: 1 Chest pain or pressure (occurs usually with exercise or physical activity, but can also occur with rest or after meals). 2 Shortness of breath (dyspnea) , especially with exertion. 3 Fatigue (feeling overly tired)."
] |
It is a disease in which the heart muscle (myocardium) becomes abnormally thick (hypertrophied).
|
[
"Passage 8",
"Passage 9"
] |
how to convert torrent file to mp3
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Report Abuse. You can;t convert a torrent file (which is tiny) into a MP3. A torrent is a tracker file that lets you connect to the 'swarm' to downoad the actual mucis. Download and install FREE Utorrent from their website.Go File Open Select the torrent you have the album will now start to downlaod.ou can;t convert a torrent file (which is tiny) into a MP3. A torrent is a tracker file that lets you connect to the 'swarm' to downoad the actual mucis.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Convert and encode audio to or from MP3. Convert wma, wav, cds, aiff, mpeg, avi and more to MP3 files or convert MP3 files to another audio format. 1 Convert or compress MP3 files quickly and easily. 2 Universal audio converter supporting all popular formats.3 Change bitrate, format or size of MP3 files.onvert and encode audio to or from MP3. Convert wma, wav, cds, aiff, mpeg, avi and more to MP3 files or convert MP3 files to another audio format. 1 Convert or compress MP3 files quickly and easily. 2 Universal audio converter supporting all popular formats.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: It does not download any torrents and it can't convert torrents to other files. Secondly, this converter can only convert files to audio files, in two formats: WAV and MP3. The application can open audio and video files of most formats, including XVID, DIVX, MP4, MPEG, WMV, ASF, RM, etc.orrent All to MP3 Converter is a video converter. Two things should be noted though. The title says torrents in its title, but it has absolutely nothing to do with what the application does. It does not download any torrents and it can't convert torrents to other files. Secondly, this converter can only convert files to audio files, in two ...\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Publisher's Description. From TorrentRockYou: Torrent Video Converter, a powerful video converting tool, helps you convert all popular video formats into AVI, MPEG, VCD, SVCD, DVD, 3GP, iPod Mp4, PSP MP4, MP4 format. Play them on your iPod, iPhone, iTouch, PSP, PS3, and other digital multimedia devices.ublisher's Description. From TorrentRockYou: Torrent Video Converter, a powerful video converting tool, helps you convert all popular video formats into AVI, MPEG, VCD, SVCD, DVD, 3GP, iPod Mp4, PSP MP4, MP4 format. Play them on your iPod, iPhone, iTouch, PSP, PS3, and other digital multimedia devices.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: From TorrentRockYou: Torrent Video Converter, a powerful video converting tool, helps you convert all popular video formats into AVI, MPEG, VCD, SVCD, DVD, 3GP, iPod Mp4, PSP MP4, MP4 format.Play them on your iPod, iPhone, iTouch, PSP, PS3, and other digital multimedia devices.ublisher's Description. From TorrentRockYou: Torrent Video Converter, a powerful video converting tool, helps you convert all popular video formats into AVI, MPEG, VCD, SVCD, DVD, 3GP, iPod Mp4, PSP MP4, MP4 format. Play them on your iPod, iPhone, iTouch, PSP, PS3, and other digital multimedia devices.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Torrent All to MP3 Converter is a video converter. Two things should be noted though. The title says torrents in its title, but it has absolutely nothing to do with what the application does. It does not download any torrents and it can't convert torrents to other files. Secondly, this converter can only convert files to audio files, in two ...orrent All to MP3 Converter is a video converter. Two things should be noted though. The title says torrents in its title, but it has absolutely nothing to do with what the application does. It does not download any torrents and it can't convert torrents to other files. Secondly, this converter can only convert files to audio files, in two ...\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Torrent All to Mp3 Converter is an audio extraction software. It has the ability to rip video files and convert audio files.Extraction: Torrent All to Mp3 Converter helps to extract the sound to the video files so as to not altering the source file. It also accelerates the download of the soundtracks.t has the ability to rip video files and convert audio files. Extraction: Torrent All to Mp3 Converter helps to extract the sound to the video files so as to not altering the source file.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: You can;t convert a torrent file (which is tiny) into a MP3. A torrent is a tracker file that lets you connect to the 'swarm' to downoad the actual mucis.Download and install FREE Utorrent from their website. Go File Open Select the torrent you have the album will now start to downlaod.ou can;t convert a torrent file (which is tiny) into a MP3. A torrent is a tracker file that lets you connect to the 'swarm' to downoad the actual mucis.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: With Torrent Audio/Video to MP3/WAV Converter, you can easily extract and convert audio from almost any kind of Audio and Video file types to MP3/WAV file.Batch conversion is supported.All comments (0).orrent All to MP3 Converter is a video converter. Two things should be noted though. The title says torrents in its title, but it has absolutely nothing to do with what the application does. It does not download any torrents and it can't convert torrents to other files. Secondly, this converter can only convert files to audio files, in two ...\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: It is able to convert torrent videos to different video formats including MP4, AVI, WMV, MOV, FLV, and more with no quality loss and fast speed, after conversion, you can freely edit videos on your computer, import the videos to iPhone, iPad, iPod, Kindle Fire, Samsung Galaxy S4, Note, Tab, and other devices.ne of the questions often been asked by people about torrent should be how to convert torrent files to avi, mpg, mp4, mp3, flv or mov or how to get torrent files (movies/music) onto iPhone or iPod something like that."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
age industrial mexico
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: In 1960 most Mexicans did not live beyond their 50s, and the average age was 17. Today the country has a wrinklier face. On average people live to 77, only a couple of years less than in the United States. Mexico’s shift from a big baby-producer to a fast-ageing nation will provide an enormous demographic dividend.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Moreover, the country is maintaining fairly strong population growth. By 2025 the number of inhabitants is projected to grow by about 15%; in Brazil it will expand by around 10%. The UN expects Mexico’s population in 2050 to be 65% of Brazil’s, up from 57% in 2000. That won’t make its citizens any richer, but it will make its economy bigger.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: He goes from table to table instead of playing with the toys he is showing. From his looks, he cannot be older than seven or eight. This is a scene that is still too often seen in Mexico. And with reason: millions of minors work in the country, and 870.000 of them are under 13 years old.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: 1 Millions of minors work in Mexico. 870.000 of them are under 13, shows a recent study. However, child labor has decreased in the last decade, because of social programs and better educated parents.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: 1 Millions of minors work in Mexico. 870.000 of them are under 13, shows a recent study. 2 However, child labor has decreased in the last decade, because of social programs and better educated parents. But the issue is still pressing and specific policies are needed.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The following medical searches, medical dictionary listings, and resources are available for use within this website... Our medical abbreviations dictionary contains over 200,000 medical, biotech, pharmaceutical and healthcare acronyms and abbreviations. It is the most comprehensive medical abbreviations dictionary on the Internet.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The New Rules For The Children In The Entertainment Industry Went Into Effect on June 30, 2008. How to find NM Child Labor Law. You can look up the New Mexico statutes (the law) online at http://www.conwaygreene.com/NewMexico.htm. Put your mouse over Databases on the tool bar and select Search New Mexico Statutes and Court Rules. Select Desktop or Tablet/Smartphone and click Ok..\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Fifty years ago Mexico was one of the world’s great producers of people. In the 1960s Mexican women had an average of seven children each; now they have only 2.4, and before 2020 the number is expected to drop below two (see chart 6).\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The following medical searches, medical dictionary listings, and resources are available for use within this website... Medical Abbreviations. Our medical abbreviations dictionary contains over 200,000 medical, biotech, pharmaceutical and healthcare acronyms and abbreviations. It is the most comprehensive medical abbreviations dictionary on the Internet.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: About Child Labor Section. The Child Labor Section enforces the Child Labor Act and investigates possible violations concerning minors. This section issues and monitors work permits and age certificates issued by the schools to assure compliance. In addition, the section is responsible for notifying school officials of applicable laws and making presentations to students and employers."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what countries did the yalta conference bring together
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The Yalta Conference was a meeting of British prime minister Winston Churchill, Soviet premier Joseph Stalin, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt early in February 1945 as World War II was winding down.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Yalta-February 1945: Germany was not yet defeated, so, although there were tensions about Poland, the big three-Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill-managed to agree to split Germany into four zones of occupation, and to allow free elections in Eastern European countries.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The February 1945 Yalta Conference was the second wartime meeting of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. During the conference, the three leaders agreed to demand Germany’s unconditional surrender and began plans for a post-war world.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The major powers at the conferences were the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. The conference at Yalta took place from February 4-11, 1945. Yalta is located on the southern coast of Ukraine.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The conferences at Yalta and Potsdam were the two most important peace conferences of World War II. The major powers at the conferences were the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. The conference at Yalta took place from February 4-11, 1945.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Introduction. The February 1945 Yalta Conference was the second wartime meeting of British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin and U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The conferences at Yalta and Potsdam were the two most important peace conferences of World War II. The major powers at the conferences were the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union. The conference at Yalta took place from February 4-11, 1945. Yalta is located on the southern coast of Ukraine.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The Yalta Conference, sometimes called the Crimea Conference and codenamed the Argonaut Conference, was the wartime meeting from February 4 to 11, 1945 between the heads of government of the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The Yalta Conference (1945). The Yalta Conference, sometimes called the Crimea Conference and codenamed the Argonaut Conference, was the wartime meeting from February 4 to 11, 1945 between the heads of government of the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Soviet Union.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: During the War, Britain and the USA were allies of the Soviet Union but the only thing that united them was their hatred of Germany. In 1945, the Big Three held two conferences at Yalta (February) and Potsdam (July) to try to sort out how they would organise the world after the war."
] |
United States, United Kingdom, and Soviet Union.
|
[
"Passage 8"
] |
how many electors are there per state
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Election Day is scheduled for Tuesday, November 8, 2016. Electoral votes are allocated based on the Census. The allocations below are based on the 2010 Census. They are effective for the 2012, 2016, and 2020 presidential elections. Total Electoral Votes: 538; Majority Needed to Elect: 270. Source: U.S. Census Bureau Last Update: 12/10/2010.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Established in Article II, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution, the Electoral College is the formal body which elects the President and Vice President of the United States. Each state has as many electors in the Electoral College as it has Representatives and Senators in the United States Congress, and the District of Columbia has three electors.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: There has been one Faithless Elector in each of the following elections: 1948, 1956, 1960, 1968, 1976, and 1988. A blank ballot was cast in 2000. The District of Columbia and 26 states “bind” their electors to vote for their promised candidate, via a number of methods including oaths and fines.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Distribution of Electoral Votes. Electoral votes are allocated based on the Census. The allocations below are based on the 2010 Census. They are effective for the 2012, 2016, and 2020 presidential elections. State.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The President and Vice President of the United States are elected by the Electoral College, which consists of 538 presidential electors from the fifty states and Washington, D.C.. Presidential electors are selected on a state-by-state basis, as determined by the laws of each state.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Except for Maine and Nebraska, all states have chosen electors on a winner-take-all basis since the 1880s. That is, each state has all of its electors pledged to the presidential candidate who wins the most votes in that state.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: First, voters cast ballots on Election Day in each state. Second, the electors from each of the 50 states gather in December and they vote for president. The person who receives a majority of votes from the Electoral College becomes President.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: A state's number of electors equals the number of representatives and senators the state has in the United States Congress. In the case of representatives, this is based on the respective populations. Each state's number of representatives is determined every 10 years by the United States Census.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Currently, there is a total of 538 electors, there being 435 representatives and 100 senators, plus the three electors allocated to Washington, D.C.. The six states with the most electors are California (55), Texas (38), New York (29), Florida (29), Illinois (20) and Pennsylvania (20). The seven smallest states by population—Alaska, Delaware, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming—have three electors each.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Most states require that all electoral votes go to the candidate who receives the majority in that state. After state election officials certify the popular vote of each state, the winning slate of electors meet in the state capital and cast two ballots—one for Vice President and one for President. Electors cannot vote for a Presidential and Vice Presidential candidate who both hail from an elector’s home state."
] |
538 electors
|
[
"Passage 9"
] |
why capitalize leases for accounting adjustments
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Accounting for leases in the United States is regulated by the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) by the Financial Accounting Standards Number 13. These standards were effective as of January 1, 1977.nder a capital lease, the lessee does not record rent as an expense. Instead, the rent is reclassified as interest and obligation payments, similarly to a mortgage (with the interest calculated each rental period on the outstanding obligation balance).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The effect of leases on the financial ratios of a firm depends on whether the lease. is classified as an operating or a capital lease. Table 2 summarizes types of profitability, solvency, and leverage ratios and the effects of operating and capital leases on each. both the operating and net income of the firm will be lowered. • the debt and capital for the firm will be understated. • the return on equity and capital will be much higher. when a lease is treated as an operating lease rather than a capital lease.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The effect of a capital lease on operating and net income is different than that of. an operating lease because capital leases are treated similarly to assets that are bought by. the firm; that is, the firm is allowed to claim depreciation on the asset and an imputed. both the operating and net income of the firm will be lowered. • the debt and capital for the firm will be understated. • the return on equity and capital will be much higher. when a lease is treated as an operating lease rather than a capital lease.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: DEFINITION of 'Capitalized Lease Method'. An accounting approach that identifies a company's lease obligation as an asset on its balance sheet. This is done because although the company has not taken ownership of the asset, the transaction is still considered to be a beneficial economic exchange for the lease holder.EFINITION of 'Capitalized Lease Method'. An accounting approach that identifies a company's lease obligation as an asset on its balance sheet. This is done because although the company has not taken ownership of the asset, the transaction is still considered to be a beneficial economic exchange for the lease holder.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: In an operating lease, the leased asset. is not shown on the balance sheet; in such cases, leases are a source of off-balance sheet. financing. In a capital lease, the leased asset is shown as an asset on the balance sheet, with a corresponding liability capturing the present value of the expected lease payments. both the operating and net income of the firm will be lowered. • the debt and capital for the firm will be understated. • the return on equity and capital will be much higher. when a lease is treated as an operating lease rather than a capital lease.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The distinction between capital leases and operating leases is considered an artifi-Financial Watch Rating agencies capitalize operating lease obligations due to a fundamental belief that leasing is simply a form of financing that has a claim on future cash flows of a company.he distinction between capital leases and operating leases is considered an artifi-Financial Watch Rating agencies capitalize operating lease obligations due to a fundamental belief that leasing is simply a form of financing that has a claim on future cash flows of a company.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: 8. Account for all leases timely. A. Capital leases: the accounting for capital leases should be recorded at the lease inception date and must be recorded no later than quarter end. FAR makes adjustments to plant and equipment equity concurrently with the periodic lease payments.rocedures. 1. Understand rules for lease accounting. Leases that meet certain criteria must be recorded as assets to the lessor; these leases are called capital leases. Capital leases are recorded on the balance sheet and depreciated over time.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Procedures. 1. Understand rules for lease accounting. Leases that meet certain criteria must be recorded as assets to the lessor; these leases are called capital leases. Capital leases are recorded on the balance sheet and depreciated over time.rocedures. 1. Understand rules for lease accounting. Leases that meet certain criteria must be recorded as assets to the lessor; these leases are called capital leases. Capital leases are recorded on the balance sheet and depreciated over time.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: A capital lease treats leased assets as if they're owned. Comstock/Comstock/Getty Images. When your business leases equipment rather than buying it, there are two ways you could handle the lease in your accounting. Depending on the terms of the lease, you could treat it as an operating lease or a capital lease. capitalized lease increases the total value of the assets on your balance sheet. That affects a number of ratios that creditors, potential investors and others use to evaluate your company's profitability and efficiency.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Under a capital lease, the lessor credits owned assets and debits a lease receivable account for the present value of the rents (an asset, which is broken out between current and long-term, the latter being the present value of rents due more than 12 months in the future).nder a capital lease, the lessee does not record rent as an expense. Instead, the rent is reclassified as interest and obligation payments, similarly to a mortgage (with the interest calculated each rental period on the outstanding obligation balance)."
] |
The company has not taken ownership of the asset, the transaction is still considered to be a beneficial economic exchange for the lease holder.
|
[
"Passage 7",
"Passage 4"
] |
why is lsd illegal
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: To be clear, we're not advocating the use of any of these drugs, and we're outright telling you not to break the law unless you want to risk ruining your life. But that said, there are a lot of myths out there in need of busting.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Drugs on the lower left are safer, while ones to the upper right are dangerous-er. Note that everyone's favorite natural drug, marijuana, is just about on par with perhaps the very definition of a synthetic drug -- LSD -- in terms of lethality, while being higher up the dependence ladder.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Harvard psychologist Timothy Leary, who promoted LSD and other mind-bending psychiatric drugs, was arrested and imprisoned for drug-related crimes. Because of its similarity to a chemical present in the brain and its similarity in effects to certain aspects of psychosis, LSD was used in experiments by psychiatrists through the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Under federal law and the law of all fifty states, LSD possession is a crime. For more information on state laws dealing with possession of LSD, see Possession of a Controlled Substance and Sale of a Controlled Substance. LSD is a synthesis of ergot, a plant fungus. Sandoz Laboratories, where the Swiss chemist who discovered LSD worked, had been researching ergot. Sandoz Laboratories was interested in the possible medicinal use of such fungi for the development of pharmaceuticals.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide) is a. synthetic (man-made) drug that has. been abused for its hallucinogenic. properties since the 1960s. If con-. sumed in a sufficiently large dose, LSD produces delusions and visual. hallucinations that distort the user’s. sense of time and identity. LSD typically is sold as a liquid. (often packaged in small bottles. designed to hold breath freshening. drops) or applied to blotter paper, sugar cubes, gelatin squares, and.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: LSD has been illegal since 1971 when it was added to paragraph (Schedule) I of the German Drug Law (BtmG) See ref. LSD is a class A drug in Greece. It is illegal to possess or sell without a special license from the government. LSD is illegal to buy, sell, or possess in Italy.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: LSD is illegal for the same reason all the other recreational drugs have been made illegal, including alcohol. Our society used to have WAY worse drug problems than it does now. You could buy cocaine and heroin in stores, and men used to get away with drunkenly beating their wives on a way larger scale than today.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Use of LSD declined in the 1980s, but picked up again in the 1990s. For a few years after 1998 LSD had become more widely used at dance clubs and all-night raves by older teens and young adults. Use dropped significantly in 2000 or so. “The days following my LSD use, I was filled with anxiety and extreme depression.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: This one you've heard from your hippie friends: Don't believe 'The Man' when he says all recreational drugs are bad for you! What I'm giving you are but plants and mushrooms that grow from Mother Earth herself! It's far better to put something natural into your body than some chemical that came out of a factory!.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: LSD is Schedule I in the United States. This means it is illegal to manufacture, buy, possess, or distribute (sell, trade or give) without a DEA license. LSD is illegal to possess, buy, sell, or produce in Belgium without government clearance. LSD is listed as a controlled substance, making production, distribution, or possession illegal. LSD is schedule III in Canada. LSD is in Finland's list of controlled substances, in the hard-drug category."
] |
Because of its similarity to a chemical present in the brain and its similarity in effects to certain aspects of psychosis.
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 5"
] |
what is the thyroid responsible for
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The primary function of your thyroid gland is to secrete thyroid hormones, which are responsible for controlling your body’s metabolism. The 2 main thyroid hormones are T3 (triiodothyronine) and T4 (thyroxine).The amount of thyroid hormones secreted is controlled by another hormone, called thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), which is released from the pituitary gland in your head.he amount of thyroid hormones secreted is controlled by another hormone, called thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), which is released from the pituitary gland in your head.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Background. Thyroid hormone is responsible for the regulating the metabolic rate of every cell in the body Since every cell in the body depends on its metabolism to perform its function, when the thyroid system is malfunctioning it can affect every system of the body.ackground. Thyroid hormone is responsible for the regulating the metabolic rate of every cell in the body Since every cell in the body depends on its metabolism to perform its function, when the thyroid system is malfunctioning it can affect every system of the body.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Having thyroid hormone levels that are too high (overactive thyroid gland). Sometimes the thyroid gland makes too much thyroid hormone, which is called hyperthyroidism. Think of your body as a car and your thyroid as the engine.An overactive thyroid makes your body idle too fast.ometimes the thyroid gland makes too much thyroid hormone, which is called hyperthyroidism. Think of your body as a car and your thyroid as the engine. An overactive thyroid makes your body idle too fast.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The function of the thyroid gland is to take iodine, found in many foods, and convert it into thyroid hormones: thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3).Thyroid cells are the only cells in the body which can absorb iodine.These cells combine iodine and the amino acid tyrosine to make T3 and T4.he function of the thyroid gland is to take iodine, found in many foods, and convert it into thyroid hormones: thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The Anatomy. The thyroid gland is one part of the endocrine system which is primarily responsible for the regulation of healthy hormones in the body. The thyroid gland is considered as one of the largest endocrine glands in the body.It weighs 2-3 grams in newborns and 18-60 grams in adults.he Anatomy. The thyroid gland is one part of the endocrine system which is primarily responsible for the regulation of healthy hormones in the body. The thyroid gland is considered as one of the largest endocrine glands in the body.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Hyperthyroidism occurs when the gland produces excessive amounts of thyroid hormones, the most common cause being Graves' disease —an autoimmune disorder. In contrast, hypothyroidism is a state of insufficient thyroid hormone production. Worldwide, the most common cause is iodine deficiency.he thyroid gland is a butterfly-shaped organ and is composed of two cone-like lobes or wings, lobus dexter (right lobe) and lobus sinister (left lobe), connected via the isthmus. Each lobe is about 5 cm long, 3 cm wide and 2 cm thick.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The hormones secreted by the thyroid gland are the triiodothyronine (T3), thyroxine (T4) and the thyrocalcitonin which is responsible for the calcium reabsorption or breakdown. T3 and T4 are the two primary hormones responsible for metabolism. The anterior pituitary gland signals the thyroid gland to secrete hormones.he Anatomy. The thyroid gland is one part of the endocrine system which is primarily responsible for the regulation of healthy hormones in the body. The thyroid gland is considered as one of the largest endocrine glands in the body.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: It participates in these processes by producing thyroid hormones, the principal ones being thyroxine (T 4) and triiodothyronine (T 3), which is more active. These hormones regulate the growth and rate of function of many other systems in the body. T 3 and T 4 are synthesized from iodine and tyrosine.he thyroid gland is a butterfly-shaped organ and is composed of two cone-like lobes or wings, lobus dexter (right lobe) and lobus sinister (left lobe), connected via the isthmus. Each lobe is about 5 cm long, 3 cm wide and 2 cm thick.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The thyroid gland, or simply the thyroid /ˈθaɪrɔɪd/ , is one of the largest endocrine glands in the body, and consists of two connected lobes.It is found in the neck, below the laryngeal prominence (Adam's apple).he thyroid gland is a butterfly-shaped organ and is composed of two cone-like lobes or wings, lobus dexter (right lobe) and lobus sinister (left lobe), connected via the isthmus. Each lobe is about 5 cm long, 3 cm wide and 2 cm thick.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The thyroid gland is part of the endocrine system and is responsible for producing and releasing thyroid hormones into the bloodstream.ollectively, T3 and T 4 are referred to as the thyroid hormones. Twenty percent of the body’s triiodothyronine is made by the thyroid gland; the other 80% comes from thyroxine converted by organs such as the liver or kidneys. The thyroid gland also produces calcitonin from cells called C-cells."
] |
Regulation of healthy hormones in the body.
|
[
"Passage 5",
"Passage 2"
] |
inflammatory pain definition
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Inflammation (Latin, inflammatio) is part of the complex biological response of body tissues to harmful stimuli, such as pathogens, damaged cells, or irritants.Inflammation is a protective response that involves immune cells, blood vessels, and molecular mediators. The complete restoration of the inflamed tissue back to a normal status. 2 Inflammatory measures such as vasodilation, chemical production, and leukocyte infiltration cease, and damaged parenchymal cells regenerate. 3 In situations where limited or short-lived inflammation has occurred this is usually the outcome.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The purpose of inflammation is to eliminate the initial cause of cell injury, clear out necrotic cells and tissues damaged from the original insult and the inflammatory process, and to initiate tissue repair. The classical signs of acute inflammation are pain, heat, redness, swelling, and loss of function. The complete restoration of the inflamed tissue back to a normal status. 2 Inflammatory measures such as vasodilation, chemical production, and leukocyte infiltration cease, and damaged parenchymal cells regenerate. 3 In situations where limited or short-lived inflammation has occurred this is usually the outcome.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Inflammation is characterized by pain, redness, swelling, heat, and disturbance of function. It may be acute or chronic. The term is not synonymous with. infection, which implies an inflammatory reaction initiated by invasion of living organisms.tymology: L, inflammare, to set afire. the protective or destructive response of body tissues to irritation or injury. Inflammation may be acute or chronic. Its cardinal signs are redness (rubor), heat (calor), swelling (tumor), and pain (dolor), often accompanied by loss of function.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Inflammation: A localized reaction that produces redness, warmth, swelling, and pain as a result of infection, irritation, or injury.Inflammation can be external or internal.nflammation: A localized reaction that produces redness, warmth, swelling, and pain as a result of infection, irritation, or injury.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Inflammatory bowel disease: A group of chronic intestinal diseases characterized by inflammation of the bowel -- the large or small intestine. The most common types of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease.he inflammation in Crohn disease involves the entire thickness of the bowel wall, whereas in ulcerative colitis the inflammation is confined to the mucosa (the inner lining) of the intestine. The symptoms of IBD include abdominal pain and diarrhea. The course is typically unpredictable.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) involves chronic inflammation of all or part of your digestive tract. IBD primarily includes ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Both usually involve severe diarrhea, pain, fatigue and weight loss.IBD can be debilitating and sometimes leads to life-threatening complications.rohn's disease is an IBD that cause inflammation of the lining of your digestive tract. In Crohn's disease, inflammation often spreads deep into affected tissues. The inflammation can involve different areas of the digestive tract — the large intestine, small intestine or both.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Etymology: L, inflammare, to set afire. the protective or destructive response of body tissues to irritation or injury. Inflammation may be acute or chronic. Its cardinal signs are redness (rubor), heat (calor), swelling (tumor), and pain (dolor), often accompanied by loss of function.tymology: L, inflammare, to set afire. the protective or destructive response of body tissues to irritation or injury. Inflammation may be acute or chronic. Its cardinal signs are redness (rubor), heat (calor), swelling (tumor), and pain (dolor), often accompanied by loss of function.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Inflammation can be classified as either acute or chronic. Acute inflammation is the initial response of the body to harmful stimuli and is achieved by the increased movement of plasma and leukocytes (especially granulocytes) from the blood into the injured tissues. The complete restoration of the inflamed tissue back to a normal status. 2 Inflammatory measures such as vasodilation, chemical production, and leukocyte infiltration cease, and damaged parenchymal cells regenerate. 3 In situations where limited or short-lived inflammation has occurred this is usually the outcome.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Muscle inflammation may be caused by an allergic reaction, exposure to a toxic substance or medicine, another disease such as cancer or rheumatic conditions, or a virus or other infectious agent.The chronic inflammatory myopathies are idiopathic, meaning they have no known cause.he inflammatory myopathies are a group of diseases that involve chronic muscle inflammation, accompanied by muscle weakness. Another word for chronic inflammation of muscle tissue is myositis.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: 1. inflammation-a response of body tissues to injury or irritation; characterized by pain and swelling and redness and heat. redness, rubor. inflammatory disease-a disease characterized by inflammation. adenitis-inflammation of a gland or lymph node.nflammation-a response of body tissues to injury or irritation; characterized by pain and swelling and redness and heat."
] |
The purpose of inflammation is to eliminate the initial cause of cell injury, clear out necrotic cells and tissues damaged from the original insult and the inflammatory process, and to initiate tissue repair. The classical signs of acute inflammation are pain, heat, redness, swelling, and loss of function. The complete restoration of the inflamed tissue back to a normal status.
|
[
"Passage 4",
"Passage 2"
] |
what is considered phi
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Protected health information under US law is any information about health status, provision of health care, or payment for health care that is created or collected by a Covered Entity, and can be linked to a specific individual. This is interpreted rather broadly and includes any part of a patient's medical record or payment history. PHI is often sought out in datasets for de-identification before researchers share the dataset publicly. Researchers remove PHI from a dataset to preserve privacy f\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Under the US Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), PHI that is linked based on the following list of 18 identifiers must be treated with special care:\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: With certain exceptions, the Privacy Rule protects a certain type of individually identifiable health information, created or maintained by covered entities and their business associates acting for the covered entity. This information is known as “protected health information” or PHI.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: With certain exceptions, the Privacy Rule protects a subset of individually identifiable health information, known as protected health information or PHI, that is held or maintained by covered entities or their business associates acting for the covered entity.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Protected health information. Protected health information (PHI) under US law is any information about health status, provision of health care, or payment for health care that is created or collected by a Covered Entity (or a Business Associate of a Covered Entity), and can be linked to a specific individual.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: PHI is often sought out in datasets for de-identification before researchers share the dataset publicly. When researchers remove PHI from a dataset they do so in an attempt to preserve privacy for research participants.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Defines PHI as individually identifiable health information that is transmitted or maintained in any form or medium (electronic, oral, or paper) by a covered entity or its business associates, excluding certain educational and employment records.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Links exist in coded de-identified data making the data considered indirectly identifiable and not anonymized. Coded de-identified data is not protected by the HIPAA Privacy Rule, but is protected under the Common Rule. The purpose of de-identification and anonymization is to use health care data in larger increments, for research purposes.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: De-identified health information created following these methods is no longer protected by the Privacy Rule because it does not fall within the definition of PHI. Of course, de-identification leads to information loss which may limit the usefulness of the resulting health information in certain circumstances.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The Privacy Rule defines PHI as individually identifiable health information, held or maintained by a covered entity or its business associates acting for the covered entity, that is transmitted or maintained in any form or medium (including the individually identifiable health information of non-U.S. citizens)."
] |
PHI or Protected health information is considered any information about health status, provision of health care, or payment for health care that is created or collected by a Covered Entity, and can be linked to a specific individual.
|
[
"Passage 5"
] |
average swim pace
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Swimming Pace Calculator. The Swimming pace calculator can be used to calculate your swim pace in order to swim a given distance in a given time. For example if you want to swim 1000m in 15 minutes your pace would be 1:30 for each 100 Meters or 4Km per hour or 1:22 for each 100 yards or 2.5 Miles per hour. Yards Meters.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: In swimming, your aerobic swim pace will be a result of your average 50 yard or meter freestyle pace or your 100 yard or meter freestyle pace over a given distance. And the given distance will be determined by the particular triathlon for which you will be training.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Interval Basics. Swim times vary according to age and ability. In general, average lap swimmers in a 100 m pool comfortably complete a 100 m swim in two minutes. A swimmer who has an easy interval time of two minutes would consider a 100 m time of one minute 30 seconds very good.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: To determine your critical swim speed you need to carry out two time trials. One over 400m and one over 200m. Warm up and then carry out the 400m time trial first and after a full recovery, do the 200m time trial. Try to pace the trials as evenly as possible, and do both from a push off the wall not a dive start. Input your times into the calculator below to get your critical swim speed.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: On my Master's swim team, the slow lane (where I swim) does about 1000 yds per half hour if we're swimming freestyle (fewer yds for other strokes per half hour). The fastest lane does 1000 yds in 20 minutes or less. So my lane aims for 4,000 yds in 2 hrs, while the fast lane aims for 5,000+.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: At the end of the swim, record your total time. Then divide that total time by 10 (a 500 yd swim is made up of 10 x 50s) and the result will be your 50 yd swim pace. Therefore, if you swam your 500 freestyle in 7 minutes and 30 seconds, your aerobic 50 yd swim pace would be .45 seconds (7.5 minutes divided by 10).\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Looking at the history of swimming world records, it appears as though the speed of human swimming is constantly on the rise. However, according to a team headed by Alan Nevill of the University of Wolverhampton, United Kingdom, there appears to be a limit to our swimming abilities.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Quick Answer. A swimmer with average skills can swim approximately 2 miles per hour. This is roughly equivalent to taking 56 seconds to swim the 50-meter length of an Olympic-sized pool. Keep Learning.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Speed is all relative to you. If you want to know if 45 min for 1000m would make you competitive against other competitive swimmers, I would have to say no. Most college level swimmers would swim 1000m in around 15 - 20 min (or faster) in a training environment.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Maximum Speed. The maximum swimming speed for humans is approximately 2 meters per second, or approximately 4.5 miles per hour, Dutch researchers Huub Toussaint and Martin Truijens reported in the journal Animal Biology in 2005 — only 16 percent of the maximum land speeds of elite human sprinters."
] |
It will be a result of your average 50 yard or meter freestyle pace or your 100 yard or meter freestyle pace over a given distance.
|
[
"Passage 2"
] |
is ethanol an element or compound
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: 1 Ethanol: Formula, Properties, Uses Ethanol alcohol is a chemical compound also referred as ethyl alcohol or grain alcohol. 2 This alcohol is a molecule consisting of hydroxyl group bonded to a carbon atom.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Ethanol (ethyl alcohol) is a compound comprised of three different elements, carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Any substance that chemically combines two or more elements is referr … ed to as a compound. 3 people found this useful.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: 1 Ethanol: Formula, Properties, Uses Ethanol alcohol is a chemical compound also referred as ethyl alcohol or grain alcohol. 2 This alcohol is a molecule consisting of hydroxyl group bonded to a carbon atom.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Ethanol is a compound (organic). Ethanol is abbreviated as EtOH, using the common organic chemistry notation of representing the ethyl group (C2H5) with Et. This designation is used both by EMS and Hospital ER staff when describing alcohol intoxication, and is found in most chemistry textbooks as well.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Ethanol (ethyl alcohol) is a compound comprised of three different elements, carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Any substance that chemically combines two or more elements is referr … ed to as a compound.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Ethanol (ethyl alcohol) is a compound comprised of three different elements, carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Any substance that chemically combines two or more elements is referr … ed to as a compound.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Ethanol is not a mixture at all. It is a compound and therefore a pure substance. Edit. Share to: 1 About Ethanol Chemical Structure Ethanol is ethyl, or grain alcohol. 2 It is the kind of alcohol found in liquor and alcoholic beverages, and it is increasingly being used as an alternative form of fuel.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Best Answer: 1. rubbing alcohol mixture* 2. carbon monoxide compound 3.nitrogen gas element 4. italian salad dressing mixture 5. iced tea mixture * Rubbing alcohol is Isopropyl Alcohol, but it is not pure. It contains water (maybe 20-30%) so it is a mixture.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Ethanol is a compound (organic). Ethanol is abbreviated as EtOH, using the common organic chemistry notation of representing the ethyl group (C2H5) with Et.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Ethanol is a compound (organic). Ethanol is abbreviated as EtOH, using the common organic chemistry notation of representing the ethyl group (C2H5) with Et. This de … signation is used both by EMS and Hospital ER staff when describing alcohol intoxication, and is found in most chemistry textbooks as well."
] |
Compound
|
[
"Passage 5"
] |
how often does the operating room need to be cleaned when it is not in use
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Cleaning should precede all disinfection and sterilization processes. Cleaning involves the removal of debris (organic or inorganic) from an instrument or device. If visible debris is not removed, it will interfere with microbial inactivation and can compromise the disinfection or sterilization process.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: If manual cleaning is not performed immediately, instruments should be placed into a container and soaked with a detergent, a disinfectant/detergent, or an enzymatic cleaner to prevent drying of patient material and make manual cleaning easier and less time consuming.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: On each type of scope: 100 percent. General review on cleaning all scopes: 100 percent. Manufacturer training (Scope representative comes in to train staff): 100 percent Note: All of the hospitals that replied to this question stated all four of these training activities happen at their hospitals.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Operating rooms are spacious, easy to clean, and well-lit, typically with overhead surgical lights, and may have viewing screens and monitors. Operating rooms are generally windowless and feature controlled temperature and humidity. Special air handlers filter the air and maintain a slightly elevated pressure.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: One of the hospitals that participated in the survey also agreed to test its scopes using the following protocol. The data/cleaning form below was used to record the results for each scope cleaned. 1. Use one data/cleaning form for each flexible scope tested.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The hospital’s operating-room director. is generally an excellent resource as you develop your cleaning protocol. Some hospital pharmacies elect to integrate the environmental-services. department into weekly and monthly cleaning procedures, but perform. daily cleaning themselves.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The instrument processing area should be physically divided into sections for 1) receiving, cleaning, and decontamination; 2) preparation and packaging; 3) sterilization; and 4) storage.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Operating theater. An operating theater (also known as an operating room, operating suite, operation theatre or operation suite) is a facility within a hospital where surgical operations are carried out in a sterile environment.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Testing scopes for cleanliness as part of a quality improvement program is part of that commitment to quality and to the patient. What follows is a generic template of a quality improvement program that can be used/modified by any hospital department that is responsible for cleaning flexible endoscopes.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Generally speaking, daily cleaning of a 15-by-15-. foot cleanroom and 15-by-10-foot anteroom will take between 45 and 60. minutes, weekly cleaning will take about 80 minutes, and monthly cleaning. will take about two hours. There are many factors to consider in designing a cleaning program for. a compounding facility."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
how do a financial advisor do a cash flow statement format for a client
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A statement of cash flows contains information about the flows of cash into and out of a company, and the uses to which the cash is put. The statement is comprised of three sections, in which are presented the cash flows that occurred during the reporting period relating to the following: 1 Operations.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: A less commonly-used format for the statement of cash flows is the direct method. The general layout of the direct method statement of cash flows is shown below, along with an explanation of the source of the information in the statement. This information can be used to prepare a cash flow statement.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: A projection of future flows of cash is called a cash flow budget. You can think of a cash flow budget as a projection of the future deposits and withdrawals to your checking account. A cash flow statement is not only concerned with the amount of the cash flows but also the timing of the flows.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: A statement of cash flows contains information about the flows of cash into and out of a company, and the uses to which the cash is put. The statement is comprised of three sections, in which are presented the cash flows that occurred during the reporting period relating to the following: 1 Operations. 2 Investing activities.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: An often over looked component of personal financial planning includes the creation of a cash flow and net worth statement. It is highly recommended that these two related documents become an integral part of the financial planning process.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Net cash from operations – This usually includes the company's net income. You can create a row with Structure in the Type field that identifies to the company's income statement row definition and the row within this definition that produces the net income.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: While it’s nice to be able to view a PFM’s balance sheet and cash flow statement within the PFM itself, ultimately financial advisors use their CRM as the central dashboard of their practice (or at least they should!), and do their client analysis in their financial planning software.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: It is important to note that the cash flow statement is not an income statement. Financial advisers often stress that income does not equal cash, especially for companies with a large percentage of credit-based sales.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: You can create a row with Structure in the Type field that identifies to the company's income statement row definition and the row within this definition that produces the net income. Net cash used for financing – In this group, you map the appropriate ledger accounts.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The statement of cash flows is part of the financial statements, and as such is heavily reviewed by the users of the financial statements. The most commonly used format for the statement of cash flows is called the indirect method."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what is normal white blood cell count UK
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: There isn't an exact 'normal' figure for the number of cells in your blood (called your blood count). 'Normal' for a large man wouldn't be the same as for a small woman. But generally the normal white cell count is between about 4,000 and 11,000 cells per cubic millimetre of blood.here isn't an exact 'normal' figure for the number of cells in your blood (called your blood count). 'Normal' for a large man wouldn't be the same as for a small woman. But generally the normal white cell count is between about 4,000 and 11,000 cells per cubic millimetre of blood.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Certain medications also can cause white blood cell counts to drop. If your white blood cell count is higher than normal, you may have an infection or inflammation. Or, it could indicate that you have an immune system disorder or a bone marrow disease.A high white blood cell count can also be a reaction to medication.1 Platelet count.ertain medications also can cause white blood cell counts to drop. If your white blood cell count is higher than normal, you may have an infection or inflammation. Or, it could indicate that you have an immune system disorder or a bone marrow disease.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: If your blood counts fall outside of the normal range, which is shown in the “Reference interval” column, their values will be reported in the “Flag” column with an ‘L’ for low and an ‘H’ for high. The example CBC below shows that white blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets are all low.lood is composed of three basic blood cell types: red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. You should have billions of these blood cells circulating throughout your body. However, certain circumstances may cause you to have fewer cells than is considered normal, a condition which is called “low blood counts”.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The white blood cell (WBC) count indicates the number of white blood cells in a sample of blood. This count provides a clue to the presence of illness.White blood cells are made in the bone marrow and protect the body against infection and aid in the immune response.his count provides a clue to the presence of illness. White blood cells are made in the bone marrow and protect the body against infection and aid in the immune response.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: A high white blood cell count (leukocytosis) is most often due to an infection, but can occur during many different illnesses. Certain medications, such as oral corticosteroids, also increase the white blood cell count. A low white blood cell count (leukopenia) is less common.Certain medications, infections, inflammatory and autoimmune conditions, heavy alcohol use, and problems in the bone marrow can cause a low white blood cell count.. Roughly between 4,500 and 10,000 cells per microliter (one one-thousandth of a milliliter). The white blood cell count is part of a complete blood count (CBC), one of the most common blood tests. Automated cell counting machines count the number of cells present in a blood sample.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: This is one of the most common blood tests. A full blood count measures the number of red cells, white cells and platelets in your blood. Red cells carry oxygen around our bodies. Haemoglobin is the part of the red cell that carries the oxygen.If you have a low red cell count, your doctor may say you are anaemic (pronounced a-nee-mic).his is one of the most common blood tests. A full blood count measures the number of red cells, white cells and platelets in your blood. Red cells carry oxygen around our bodies. Haemoglobin is the part of the red cell that carries the oxygen.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The white blood cell differential is often used as part of a complete blood count (CBC) as a general health check. It may be used to help diagnose the cause of a high or low white blood cell (WBC) count, as determined with a CBC.he white blood cell differential is often used as part of a complete blood count (CBC) as a general health check. It may be used to help diagnose the cause of a high or low white blood cell (WBC) count, as determined with a CBC.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: If your blood counts fall outside of the normal range, which is shown in the “Reference interval” column, their values will be reported in the “Flag” column with an ‘L’ for low and an ‘H’ for high. The example CBC below shows that white blood cells, red blood cells, and platelets are all low.lood is composed of three basic blood cell types: red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets. You should have billions of these blood cells circulating throughout your body. However, certain circumstances may cause you to have fewer cells than is considered normal, a condition which is called “low blood counts”.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The overall White Blood Cell (WBC) count is important to monitor as a significant elevation in WBC may indicate infection, lack of response to treatment, or worsening of leukemia. Conversely, some treatments for leukemia suppress the WBC and it is important to make sure the WBC does not dip below a critical range. Complete Blood Count (CBC) that measures the number of white blood cells (WBCs), red blood cells and platelets in the patient's sample of blood should be routinely monitored in CML patients.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: A. Roughly between 4,500 and 10,000 cells per microliter (one one-thousandth of a milliliter). The white blood cell count is part of a complete blood count (CBC), one of the most common blood tests. Automated cell counting machines count the number of cells present in a blood sample.Different laboratories use different cell counting machines, and each lab may have slightly different values for the normal range.. Roughly between 4,500 and 10,000 cells per microliter (one one-thousandth of a milliliter). The white blood cell count is part of a complete blood count (CBC), one of the most common blood tests. Automated cell counting machines count the number of cells present in a blood sample."
] |
Between about 4,000 and 11,000 cells per cubic millimetre of blood.
|
[
"Passage 4",
"Passage 1"
] |
what is cpi number
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Customer Service. CPI promises to provide timely, courteous customer service. Your satisfaction is our priority. If you have a question, comment, or suggestion about any of our products or services, please call us at 800.558.8976 or email [email protected]. CPI guarantees your satisfaction with our training programs.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: It lists all the Consumer Price Index (CPI-U) numbers from January 2000 to the Present. The Consumer Price Index (CPI-U) is compiled by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and is based upon a 1982 Base of 100. Therefore, a Consumer Price Index of 158 would indicate 58% inflation since 1982. The commonly quoted inflation rate of say 3% is actually the change in the Consumer Price Index from a year earlier. By looking at the change in the index we can see that what cost an average of 9.9 cents in 1913 would cost about $1.82 in 2003 and $2.30 in August of 2012.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: If EVM practitioners could view CPI with an expectation. a The CPI = EV / AC, where EV is the Earned Value and AC is the Actual Cost. PM World Today – March 2011 (Vol XIII, Issue III) PM World Today is a free monthly eJournal - Subscriptions available at http://www.pmworldtoday.net Page 2.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Q. How can I find the CPI data? A. The headline CPI numbers, percentage change from the previous quarter, and percentage change from corresponding quarter of the previous year, for the weighted average of eight capital cities can be found in the Main Features, Consumer Price Index, Australia (cat. no. 6401.0).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: A. A CPI is a measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by households for a fixed basket of goods and services. In Australia, the CPI measures the changes in the price of a fixed basket of goods and services, acquired by household consumers who are resident in the eight State/Territory capital cities.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The percent change in the CPI provides a measure of inflation, which is useful for a range of purposes. Relevant to the topic of poverty is the CPI's use by Census Bureau analysts to adjust the official poverty measure for inflation each year.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The CPI-W's population represents about 32 percent of the total U.S. population, and is a subset of the CPI-U. In February 2015, the BLS introduced a new estimation system for the Consumer Price Index, the first major improvement in more than 25 years.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers (CPI-W) is based on the expenditures of households included in the CPI-U definition that get more than half their income from clerical work and that have at least one earner who has been employed at least 37 weeks during the previous 12 months.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: What it means: Published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Consumer Price Index measures the change in prices paid by consumers for a representative group of products and services. How it's used: The Consumer Price Index (CPI) measures inflation at the consumer level. The CPI is used as an economy-wide measure of inflation and is used to determine annual cost of living adjustments to Social Security payments and employee paychecks. Back to key economic statistics page.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Inflation data. CPI index (video) | Inflation basics | Khan Academy. If you're seeing this message, it means we're having trouble loading external resources on our website. If you're behind a web filter, please make sure that the domains *.kastatic.org and *.kasandbox.org are unblocked. Main content."
] |
A measure of the average change over time in the prices paid by households for a fixed basket of goods and services.
|
[
"Passage 5",
"Passage 1"
] |
if a cell includes a certain word
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Supposing you have the below data, and want to count the number of cells which contain the text Apple. You can use the COUNTIF function to count the number of specific text or part of text cells. 1. Select a blank cell (Cell C2), enter the formula =COUNTIF(A2:A6,*Apple*) into the cell and then press the Enter key. You will get the result immediately in the selected cell.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Cell contains specific text. To check if a cell contains specific text, you can use the SEARCH function together with the ISNUMBER function. In the generic version, substring is the specific text you are looking for, and text represents text in the cell you are checking. In the example shown, the formula in D4 is: =ISNUMBER(SEARCH(C4,B4))\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: #1. I need to create a formula to check if a cell contains some text. For example, I need to check if cell A1 contains the text carolyn and display Yes if it does and No if it doesn't. I've tried searching online but can't figure out how to do this.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: JenDingbat asked on. Hi. I'm trying to do an IF formula but it doesn't seem to work for Text. If cell AB2 or AD2 (or both) contains Fr, say Yes, if not say nothing. I've put this formula. =IF(OR(AB2<>Fr, AD2<>Fr), Yes, ) But it's coming up with Yes wether AB2 or AD2 have Fr, blank or anything else. It's just sticking to Yes!\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: If the worksheet name contains an embedded space (e.g. 2015 Sales), then you must surround it with single quotes in the formula. If the intent is to search Sheet1 column A for a cell containing Apple, then return the entire row to Sheet2, you can use either VLOOKUP or INDEX & MATCH type formulas. The VLOOKUP formula requires that the column being tested be the leftmost one in the lookup table. The INDEX & MATCH formula has no such restriction.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: TiChNi Guest. Certainly there is a simple way to find out if a cell that has text in. it contains a certain word. For example, cell A1 is populated with. the words Houston, TX, USA.. In Cell A2 I want a function that can. look into A1 to see if the word Houston is contained in there. If.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: SUMIF Text contains a certain word. This is a discussion on SUMIF Text contains a certain word within the Excel Questions forums, part of the Question Forums category; Hi, Does anyone know how to have a SUMIF apply if a cell contains a certain text? Example: Product Sales ... Feb 9th, 2012, 02:37 AM #1. New Member.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: If a cell in column A contains a word like univ, I want the number 1 to appear in the respective row in column 2. If a cell in column A does not contain a word univ, I want the number 0 to appear in the respective row in column 2. Many thanks. Last edited by undergraduate; 01-29-2010 at 09:56 PM. Register To Reply.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: If cell contains. If you want to do something when a cell contains specific text, you can wrap the formula in an IF statement like this: =IF(ISNUMBER(SEARCH(substring,text)), Yes, No) Instead of returning TRUE or FALSE, the formula above, will return Yes if substring is found and No if not.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: You can use the COUNTIF function to count the number of specific text or part of text cells. 1 1. Select a blank cell (Cell C2), enter the formula =COUNTIF(A2:A6,*Apple*) into the cell and then press the Enter key. 2 1. Select the range you want to count number of cells containing specific text."
] |
If a cell in column A contains a word like univ, I want the number 1 to appear in the respective row in column.
|
[
"Passage 8",
"Passage 9"
] |
average cost of renting an apartment in toronto
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Ontario Average Rent. As of September 2014, average apartment rent within 10 miles of Ontario, CA is $1714. One bedroom apartments in Ontario rent for $0 a month on average and two bedroom apartment rents average $0.See our listings of Ontario Apartments.he average apartment rent over the prior 6 months in Ontario has increased by $349 (25.6%). One bedroom units have decreased by $1379 (-100%) and two bedroom apartments have decreased by $0 (0%). See our listings of Ontario Apartments.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: It costs at least $1.2 million dollars for a detached house in the Old Toronto. A house in the 4 boroughs will cost you at least $695,000 dollars. Many jobs are given to women while men are discriminated from hiring practices.ne square in toronto costs 5965 dollars it's in city toronto and one square meter in something suburb costs 2000-3500 in north york, 1500-2200 in scarborouth, 3700-5000 in oakville, 3000-3800 in mississauga and 4000-5500 in richmond hill.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: As of August 2015, average apartment rent within 10 miles of Toronto, ON is $1676. One bedroom apartments in Toronto rent for $1392 a month on average and two bedroom apartment rents average $2006.See our listings of Toronto Apartments.eware of rental ad scams: Rent Jungle is a rental search engine for apartment hunters and is not responsible for the content of rental listings found on the site. Rent Jungle encourages you to use common sense while apartment hunting. Beware of fraudulent listings.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The average apartment rent over the prior 6 months in Toronto has increased by $35 (2.1%). One bedroom units have decreased by $102 (-6.8%) and two bedroom apartments have decreased by $10 (-0.5%).eware of rental ad scams: Rent Jungle is a rental search engine for apartment hunters and is not responsible for the content of rental listings found on the site. Rent Jungle encourages you to use common sense while apartment hunting. Beware of fraudulent listings.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The average apartment rent over the prior 6 months in Ontario has increased by $349 (25.6%). One bedroom units have decreased by $1379 (-100%) and two bedroom apartments have decreased by $0 (0%). See our listings of Ontario Apartments.he average apartment rent over the prior 6 months in Ontario has increased by $349 (25.6%). One bedroom units have decreased by $1379 (-100%) and two bedroom apartments have decreased by $0 (0%). See our listings of Ontario Apartments.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Toronto Rent Trends. The average apartment rent over the prior 6 months in Toronto has increased by $35 (2.1%). One bedroom units have decreased by $102 (-6.8%) and two bedroom apartments have decreased by $10 (-0.5%). See our listings of Toronto Apartments.eware of rental ad scams: Rent Jungle is a rental search engine for apartment hunters and is not responsible for the content of rental listings found on the site. Rent Jungle encourages you to use common sense while apartment hunting. Beware of fraudulent listings.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: What about toronto, than the best best best city in the world. Because average salary in Toronto 3400 dollars, average costs in Toronto on a one family on a one month 3900 dollars, residue 2900 dollars, and 17 percents family have income 100 000 cnd in a one year.ne square in toronto costs 5965 dollars it's in city toronto and one square meter in something suburb costs 2000-3500 in north york, 1500-2200 in scarborouth, 3700-5000 in oakville, 3000-3800 in mississauga and 4000-5500 in richmond hill.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Beware of rental ad scams: Rent Jungle is a rental search engine for apartment hunters and is not responsible for the content of rental listings found on the site. Rent Jungle encourages you to use common sense while apartment hunting. Beware of fraudulent listings.eware of rental ad scams: Rent Jungle is a rental search engine for apartment hunters and is not responsible for the content of rental listings found on the site. Rent Jungle encourages you to use common sense while apartment hunting. Beware of fraudulent listings.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Can you guess where in Canada has the highest cost to rent an apartment? Vancouver! The average cost to rent a bachelor unit in Vancouver is about $910 a month. Toronto is a close second at $872 followed by Calgary at $780.Montreal, which had the highest number of rentals, will cost you $543.he speed at which rents are increasing I think Toronto will come at the top very soon. No doubt the rental apartment facilities in Toronto are world class. Pretty cool INFOGRAPHICS on the topic of apartment rentals across Canada.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The numbers in this article are from the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Published in 2014. The cost of renting an apartment or house depends on the size (number of bedrooms), the community and neighbourhood where it is located, and the age and condition of the apartment or house.Prices vary from city to city and from year to year.Generally, smaller cities have lower rental costs than larger cities. You can find information about average rent prices in past years in CHMC Rental Market Reports. For local rental market information, please contact your local CMHC branch.rices vary from city to city and from year to year. Generally, smaller cities have lower rental costs than larger cities. You can find information about average rent prices in past years in CHMC Rental Market Reports. For local rental market information, please contact your local CMHC branch."
] |
As of August 2015, average apartment rent within 10 miles of Toronto, ON is $1676.
|
[
"Passage 3"
] |
what does the cinnamon powder do for human beings
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: What does concern us, however, is the growing trend for people who are diagnosed with type 2 diabetes or prediabetes to regularly consume cassia cinnamon on their oatmeal or toast in order to lower blood sugar levels. A teaspoon of cassia cinnamon daily could pose serious risks.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Researchers have concluded that the health benefits of cinnamon can be obtained in the form of its pure bark, essential oils, in ground spice form (which is bark powder), or in extract form when its special phenolic compounds, flavonoids, and antioxidants are isolated.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Cinnamon has also been shown to reduce high blood pressure, which is another threat for causing heart disease or a stroke. (11) And there are even more heart health benefits of cinnamon. Research shows that cinnamon is a helpful blood coagulant and prevents bleeding by helping the body to form blood clots.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: 26 HEALTH BENEFITS OF CINNAMON. Unfortunately because the US FDA heavily regulates anything that can be used like a medicine, the FDA will no longer allow us to display any material or cite any research studies on the benefits of Cinnamon. Apparantly we cannot even make a suggestion. This is an unfortunate turn of events but we must follow the law.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Why do people take cinnamon? Some research has found that a particular type of cinnamon, cassia cinnamon, may lower blood sugar in people with diabetes. However, other studies have not found a benefit. Studies of cinnamon for lowering cholesterol and treating yeast infections in people with HIV have been inconclusive.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: To date, cassia cinnamon has been studied more than ceylon cinnamon has, but researchers think that ceylon cinnamon actually has potential for having more health benefits than cassia cinnamon. Ceylon cinnamon also contains less of a compound called coumarins than cassia cinnamon does.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The Pros and Cons of Cinnamon: The more critical issue is whether they have the same medicinal properties and safety profile. Most of the research showing that cinnamon can lower blood sugar has utilized cassia cinnamon. The extracts that are sold in health food stores are also primarily derived from cassia cinnamon.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Part of the confusion on the pros and cons of cinnamon involves what is and is not “true” cinnamon. Cinnamomum zeylanicum, also known as Cinnamomum verum, is native to Ceylon (Sri Lanka). China and Southeast Asia are the home of Cinnamomum cassia, a related species that has an equally long history.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: For now, studies have been mixed, and it’s unclear what role cinnamon may play in improving health. Because cinnamon is an unproven treatment, there is no established dose. Some recommend 1/2 to 1 teaspoon (2-4 grams) of powder a day. Some studies have used between 1 gram and 6 grams of cinnamon.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The Health Benefits of Cinnamon. Cinnamon does not only taste good, it also contains many health benefits such as: Anti-Clotting and Anti-Microbial actions, Blood Sugar Control, it boosts Brain Function, it's Calcium and Fiber protect against Heart Disease and improve Colon Health, among other things. Date: 08/15/05."
] |
Anti-Clotting and Anti-Microbial actions, Blood Sugar Control, it boosts Brain Function, it's Calcium and Fiber protect against Heart Disease and improve Colon Health, among other things.
|
[
"Passage 10"
] |
what is meant by merger of equals
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: In practice, however, actual mergers of equals don't happen very often. Usually, one company will buy another and, as part of the deal's terms, simply allow the acquired firm to proclaim that the action is a merger of equals, even if it's technically an acquisition.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Defintion of Merger. A merger is the combining of two or more business entities. When people use the term merger, they mean a merger of equals -- two companies of the same size deciding to go forward in business as one. An example is Exxon-Mobil. There are different types of mergers.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Most merger activity, even friendly takeovers, sees one company acquire another. When one company is an acquirer, it is proper to call the transaction an acquisition. Because one company is the purchaser and the other is for sale, such a transaction cannot be viewed as a merger of equals.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: A merger is the combining of two or more business entities. When people use the term merger, they mean a merger of equals -- two companies of the same size deciding to go forward in business as one. An example is Exxon-Mobil.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: A merger of equals is a situation in which two firms of roughly the same size choose to combine into a single business entity. This is different from mergers in which one company is identified as the acquiring entity and the other as the acquired business operation.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: DEFINITION of 'Merger Of Equals'. The combination of two firms of about the same size to form a single company. In a merger of equals, shareholders from both firms surrender their shares and receive securities issued by the new company.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: In an acquisition, as in some of the merger deals we discuss above, a company can buy another company with cash, stock or a combination of the two. Another possibility, which is common in smaller deals, is for one company to acquire all the assets of another company.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: BREAKING DOWN 'Merger Of Equals'. A merger of equals is the most accurate definition of a merger. Most merger activity, even friendly takeovers, sees one company acquire another. When one company is an acquirer, it is proper to call the transaction an acquisition.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Defintion of Merger. A merger is the combining of two or more business entities. When people use the term merger, they mean a merger of equals -- two companies of the same size deciding to go forward in business as one. An example is Exxon-Mobil.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: A merger is the combining of two or more business entities. When people use the term merger, they mean a merger of equals -- two companies of the same size deciding to go forward in business as one."
] |
A situation in which two firms of roughly the same size choose to combine into a single business entity.
|
[
"Passage 5",
"Passage 9"
] |
how much does a us marine police officer make
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, reports that the average pay for police (including K9 officers) and sheriff's patrol officers in 2010 was $55,620 a year. Based on these figures and a few others, its estimated that on average K-9 officers make between $55,000 and $60,000 a year on average.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 9 United States Marine Corps Military Police Officer Salaries. United States Marine Corps Military Police Officers earn $33,000 annually, or $16 per hour, which is 10% higher than the national average for all Military Police Officers at $30,000 annually and 60% lower than the national salary average for all working Americans.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The US Marine Corps has a current strength of 203,095 active and 40,000 reserve personnel, as of May 2009. Of active personnel, 182,147 are enlisted personnel, and 20,639 are officers. The enlisted to officer ratio in the Marine Corps is currently around 9.8:1.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Officers may work for a separate state agency, a division of the state police, or a special unit within a local sheriff's office or police department. Regardless of who they work for, if it happens on the water, the marine patrol is generally responsible for it.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Warrant Officers. Warrant officers are technical specialists ranked above enlisted Marines but below commissioned officers. The lowest warrant officer pay grade, W-1, earns monthly wages of $2,811 for less than two years of service, $3,570 for six years, $4,205 for 12 years and $4,689 for more than 18 years of duty.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: K-9 police officers may earn as little as $32,000 a year (as reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics for officers in the lowest 10th percentile). However, the same report indcates that officers in the 90th percentile of all officer can make as much as $85,000 a year. The annual pay a K-9 officer receives may also differ based on sector. In 2010 officers who worked for the state on average earned $58,200 a year.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The highest warrant officer grade, W-5, or chief warrant officer 5, makes a monthly salary of $7,047 at the minimum time of 20 years to a maximum of $9,222 at for more than 38 years of duty.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Browse United States Marine Corps Salaries by Job Title →. United States Marine Corps Military Police Officers earn $33,000 annually, or $16 per hour, which is 10% higher than the national average for all Military Police Officers at $30,000 annually and 60% lower than the national salary average for all working Americans.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The US Military uses a standard pay table that increases with rank and years served. It can be found on all military recruitment sites. As of 2007, a new officer with receive about $30,000 the first year. Also, military personnel receive benefits not shown in their pay.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The best places to look for marine patrol jobs are coastal states like Florida and communities with large bodies of water, such as those near the Great Lakes. Marine patrol officers can expect to earn between $32,000 and $88,000 per year, depending on agency and location."
] |
$33,000 annually, or $16 per hour.
|
[
"Passage 2"
] |
where was ella fitzgerald born
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Born on April 25, 1917 in Newport News, Virginia, singer Ella Fitzgerald was the product of a common-law marriage between William Fitzgerald and Temperance Tempie Williams Fitzgerald. Ella experienced a troubled childhood that began with her parents separating shortly after her birth.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Ella Fitzgerald was born on April 25, 1918, in Newport News, Virginia, but she spent her youth just outside New York City in Yonkers, New York, and received her musical education in public schools. During elementary school she began singing at her local church, the Bethany African Methodist Episcopal Church.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Ella Jane Fitzgerald was born in Newport News, Va. on April 25, 1917. Her father, William, and mother, Temperance (Tempie), parted ways shortly after her birth. Together, Tempie and Ella went to Yonkers, N.Y, where they eventually moved in with Tempie's longtime boyfriend Joseph Da Silva.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Beginnings. Ella Jane Fitzgerald was born on April 17, 1917, in Newport News, Virginia. Her parents were William and Temperance (Tempie); they divorced shortly after she was born. Ella and her mother moved to Yonkers, New York, where they eventually moved in with her mother s boyfriend, Joseph Da Silva.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Ella Fitzgerald was born on April 25, 1918, in Newport News, Virginia, but she spent her youth just outside New York City in Yonkers, New York, and received her musical education in public schools.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Ella Jane Fitzgerald was born on April 17, 1917, in Newport News, Virginia. Her parents were William and Temperance (Tempie); they divorced shortly after she was born. Ella and her mother moved to Yonkers, New York, where they eventually moved in with her mother s boyfriend, Joseph Da Silva.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald could sing like a saxophone. Today, April 25, 1918, is the day she was born in Newport News, Virginia.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: A rising star. Ella Fitzgerald was born on April 25, 1918, in Newport News, Virginia, but she spent her youth just outside New York City in Yonkers, New York, and received her musical education in public schools.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Ella Fitzgerald Was Born April 25, 1918. Jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald could sing like a saxophone. Today, April 25, 1918, is the day she was born in Newport News, Virginia. She mastered a technique called scat in which the singer makes up nonsense syllables to imitate musical instruments: Skee-ba-doobie-do-wah.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Ella Fitzgerald Was Born April 25, 1918. Jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald could sing like a saxophone. Today, April 25, 1918, is the day she was born in Newport News, Virginia."
] |
Newport News, Virginia
|
[
"Passage 6"
] |
who is douglas fairbanks junior
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Noblesse oblige. He was born Douglas Elton Fairbanks, Jr. in New York City, New York, to Anna Beth (Sully), daughter of a very wealthy cotton mogul, and actor Douglas Fairbanks (born Douglas Elton Thomas Ullman), then not yet established as the swashbuckling idol he would become.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Douglas Fairbanks Jr. was born on the 9th of December 1909, which was a Thursday. Douglas Fairbanks Jr.'s next birthday would be in 238 days (would be turning 108years old then). Today, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. would be 107 years old. To be more precise, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. would be 39060 days old or 937440 hours.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Douglas Fairbanks. For his son, see Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Douglas Fairbanks (born Douglas Elton Thomas Ullman; May 23, 1883 – December 12, 1939) was an American actor, screenwriter, director, and producer. He was best known for his swashbuckling roles in silent films such as The Thief of Bagdad, Robin Hood, and The Mark of Zorro but spent the early part of his career making comedies.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Douglas Fairbanks Jr. was in relationships with Madeleine Carroll (1938), Joan Fontaine (1938), Vera Zorina (1938), Gertrude Lawrence (1938), Benita Hume (1933), Marlene Dietrich (1930 - 1938), Katharine Hepburn (1930), Betty Bronson, Duchess Margaret of Argyle, Merle Oberon, Norma Shearer, Howard Hughes and Helene Costello.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Douglas Fairbanks Jr.'s net worth is estimated to be in the range of approximately $1000000 in 2017, according to the users of vipfaq. The estimated net worth includes stocks, properties, and luxury goods such as yachts and private airplanes.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: His lovers included Marlene Dietrich and Gertrude Lawrence and, at one time or another, he says, both Jean Harlow and Clifton Webb made unprovoked advances. He is, of course, Douglas Fairbanks Jr., and with tidbits like those to tell, it was inevitable that someday the actor would put his story in print. That someday is here: ''The Salad Days,'' an autobiography that covers his life up to the eve of America's entry into World War II, was published this week by Doubleday.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: HE is the son of the movies' first swashbuckling superhero. His first stepmother was America's sweetheart, Mary Pickford. His first wife - he was 19 years old, she of an uncertain age, although she admitted to 21 - was Joan Crawford.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: According to our records, Douglas Fairbanks Jr. is possibly single. Douglas Fairbanks Jr. was previously married to Vera Shelton (1991 - 2000), Mary Eppling (1939 - 1988) and Joan Crawford (1929 - 1933).\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Fairbanks was born Douglas Elton Thomas Ullman (spelled Ulman by Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. in his memoirs) in Denver, Colorado, the son of H. Charles Ullman (born September 15, 1833) and Ella Adelaide (née Marsh; born 1847).\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Although he appeared in approximately 100 movies or TV shows, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. never really intended to take up acting as a career. However, the environment he was born into and the circumstances naturally led him to be a thespian. Noblesse oblige."
] |
An American actor, screenwriter, director, and producer.
|
[
"Passage 3"
] |
what lab test is an lft
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: What Are Liver Function Tests? Liver function tests help determine the health of your liver by measuring the levels of proteins, liver enzymes, or bilirubin in your blood. Many tests can be performed on the liver, but most of them don’t measure the overall function of the liver.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Related tests: ALT, ALP, AST, Bilirubin, Albumin, Total Protein, GGT, Prothrombin Time and International Normalized Ratio, LD, Comprehensive Metabolic Panel, Hepatitis A Testing, Hepatitis B Testing, Hepatitis C Testing, Emergency and Overdose Drug Testing, Ethanol, ANA, Smooth Muscle Antibody, Anti-LKM-1, Drugs of Abuse Testing, Copper, ...\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: There are a number of liver function tests, with lots of complex names. Alanine transaminase (ALT) test. ALT is an enzyme that helps break down proteins and is found mainly in your liver. High levels in your blood could mean you have liver damage.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Your liver does all kinds of work that’s critical to your health. It helps break down food, clean your blood, make proteins, and store energy. If things go wrong with it, you might have a number of symptoms, from a yellow coloring of your skin to slurred speech. That’s when you might need a liver function test. There’s actually not just one test. Your doctor will choose from several tests that check levels of different proteins and enzymes in your blood.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Liver function tests are used to measure specific enzymes and proteins in your blood. Depending on the test, either higher- or lower-than-normal levels of these enzymes or proteins can indicate a problem with your liver.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: For other uses, see LFT. Liver function tests (LFTs or LFs) are groups of blood tests that give information about the state of a patient's liver. These tests include prothrombin time (PT/INR), aPTT, albumin, bilirubin (direct and indirect), and others. Liver transaminases (AST or SGOT and ALT or SGPT) are useful biomarkers of liver injury in a patient with some degree of intact liver function.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Commonly used tests to check liver function are the alanine transaminase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), albumin, and bilirubin tests. The ALT and AST tests measure enzymes that your liver releases in response to damage or disease.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: When to Get Tested? Periodically to evaluate liver function; whenever you are at risk for liver injury; when you are taking medications that may affect your liver; when you have a liver disease; when you have symptoms associated with liver damage, such as jaundice.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Liver Enzyme and Function Blood Test Results. Liver enzymes, or liver (hepatic) function tests, are common blood tests used to determine if the liver is functioning normally or if it has an injury or disease.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: This lab test measure the total amount of bilirubin in the blood, including direct and indirect bilirubin. Bilirubin is produced during the normal process of blood cells dying and the liver excretes bilirubin through bile. Too much bilirubin in the blood results in the patient looking yellow, or jaundiced. This test may detect elevated levels of bilirubin before jaundice is present. Normal Level: 1mg per 100 ml."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
how many spaces over in a paper in a three level apa format
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Last Update: 3/29/16 2. Abstract. The abstract is created on a blank page and follows the title page. The page header will still. contain the title of the paper in all capital letters, but “Running head:” is no longer needed. Start the page with the word “Abstract” in the center of the first line.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Click “Different First Page” under Header & Footer Tools. Type. “Running head:” then your title in all capital letters. Tab 2 times and type the number 1. • Be sure that all information in the header is in a 12-point font to match the text in the. body of your paper. • The title of your paper, your name, and the name of the college belong centered in the. middle of page 1.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: APA title page format requirements: • A header appears on every page. The words “Running head” only appear on the first. page. • To insert the header into your paper, go to the second page of your document.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Pages Numbers in APA - Page Number Placement for Body of Paper - 1/3. APA specifies consectutive page numbers for a title page, body of the research paper, and bibliography. 1 Page numbers = Title page begins with 1. Page numbering is consecutive (i.e. 1,2,3, etc.).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: APA specifies consectutive page numbers for a title page, body of the research paper, and bibliography. 1 Page numbers = Title page begins with 1. 2 Page numbering is consecutive (i.e. 1,2,3, etc.). Start by numbering the body of the paper before numbering the title page.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The title page of the document should include the following: * Page header: Running head is flush left; page number is flush right. * Title of the paper, student's name, and name of college of university (typed in that order & centered on the title page). The Running head will appear .5 from the top of the page.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The following are specific instructions for how to set up a document in APA format. All margins (top, bottom and sides) should be set at a minimum of one inch. The default setting for most Microsoft Word programs is one inch margins.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: General 6th edition APA guidelines for the reference page(s) include: - Margins should be at least one inch all around (top, bottom, left and right) & double spacing should be used. - The page heading should be centered and called References.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: 1 Running head (Body of paper) = Title of the paper in CAPS. The maximum number of characters in the title is 50. This includes letters, punctuation, and spaces. 2 Example - THE BEST IN THE WEST. Page number location = Upper right hand corner of each page. Page numbering for body of paper starts with 2.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: APA Format Guidelines. All margins (top, bottom and sides) should be set at a minimum of one inch. The default setting for most Microsoft Word programs is one inch margins. You can set the margins of your Word document by selecting Page Layout > Margins from the Ribbon Display Options."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
how many tablespoons are in a gallon of vinegar
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: How Many Tablespoons in a Cup, Cups in a Gallon? Your Cheat Sheet for Common Recipe Measurements August 22, 2012 by Kimberley Stakal\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Organic Apple Cider Vinegar? Millions of Health Conscious Consumers worldwide use Bragg Organic Apple Cider Vinegar every day. The three key reasons why most people use Bragg Organic Apple Cider Vinegar are for culinary uses by adding it to foods and recipes, for health and wellness purposes and as a beauty aid.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: How Much ACV In a Gallon of Water? Discussion in 'Feeding & Watering Your Flock' started by Erin~TheChickenLover, Jul 3, 2012.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: How many calories are there in a cup of vinegar? There are about 22cal per 100ml of vinegar, and 100ml is 0.423 cups, therefore with a bit of rearranging you get 1 cup=52cals (approx!) Edit\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Effects: 1 Helps maintain a youthful skin and vibrant body. 2 Helps remove artery plaque. 3 Helps fight germs, viruses and bacteria naturally. 4 Helps regulate calcium metabolism. 5 Helps keep blood the right consistency. 6 Helps regulate women’s menstruation. 7 Helps normalize the urine pH, thus relieving the frequent urge to urinate.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Sand with Gravel, wet weigh(s) 2.02 gram per (cubic centimeter) or 1.168 ounce per (cubic inch) [ weight to volume | volume to weight | price | density] Weight/Volume at Temperature. Soybean oil weigh(s) 0.899 gram per (cubic centimeter) or 0.52 ounce per (cubic inch) at 51°C or 123.8°F [ weight to volume | volume to weight | price]\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Gallons to tablespoons volume units conversion factors are listed below. To find out how many tablespoons in gallons, simply use the converter. 1 Gallon [Fluid] = 256 Tablespoons [Fluid US or UK] 1 Gallon [Dry] = 297.893681 Tablespoons [Dry] Gallon is an imperial and US customary unit. There is one type of gallon in imperial system and 2 types (liquid and dry) in US customary system. It is widely used in daily life, such as measuring the fuel efficiency as miles per gallon, etc. The abbreviation is gal. Tablespoon is a commonly used volume unit in cooking recipes. But not all the tablespoons are the same.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: When I water them, I always add some vinegar to the water because they definitely have no tolerance for high pH, and high means even 6.0, a pH level usually considered safely acidic. If you add a tablespoon or two of vinegar per gallon of tap water, it should be ok, given the nature of NM tap water.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: 16 tablespoons = 1 cup. 1 cup = ½ pint. 1 cup = 8 fluid ounces. 2 cups = 1 pint. 2 cups = 16 fluid ounces. 4 cups = 1 quart. 8 cups = ½ gallon. 16 cups = 1 gallon. 128 fluid ounces = 1 gallon. Need to know how many teaspoons are in 1 1/3 cups? Or how many ounces are in 3 ½ cups?\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: 2 teaspoons of organic apple cider vinegar. 16 ounces of water. Sip, don't chug! We suggest 2 teaspoons of apple cider vinegar in 16 ounces of water that you'll sip throughout the day, rather than drinking the whole concoction at once 3 times a day. You will be keeping your pH in a constant, alkalized state by sipping this highly diluted dosage."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
where do blood clots usually form in the heart with tachycardia
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: This is sudden cardiac arrest, which is a medical emergency. If the heart can continue to pump normally, though, some ventricular tachycardias may be tolerated without fainting (syncope) or cardiac arrest. Tachycardia may be nonsustained (lasting only seconds) or sustained (lasting for minutes or hours).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Tachycardias also can cause serious injury to other organs. For example, the brain, kidneys, lungs or liver may be damaged during prolonged cardiac arrest. Blood clots can form in the heart's upper chambers because of atrial fibrillation, a disorder in which the atria quiver instead of beating effectively. Blood that isn't pumped completely out of the atria when the heart beats may pool and clot.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Ventricular tachycardia can occur without heart disease. Scar tissue may form in the muscle of the ventricles days, months, or years after a heart attack. This can lead to ventricular tachycardia. Ventricular tachycardia can also be caused by: Anti-arrhythmic drugs (used to treat an abnormal heart rhythm)\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: There are three types of tachycardias: Atrial or Supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT) Atrial or Supraventricular tachycardia (SVT) is a fast heart rate that starts in the upper chambers of the heart. Some forms are called paroxysmal atrial tachycardia (PAT) or paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT). How it happens. Electrical signals in the heart's upper chambers fire abnormally, which interferes with electrical signals coming from the sinoatrial (SA) node --- the heart's natural pacemaker.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Ventricular tachycardia can occur without heart disease. Scar tissue may form in the muscle of the ventricles days, months, or years after a heart attack. This can lead to ventricular tachycardia. Ventricular tachycardia can also be caused by: 1 Anti-arrhythmic drugs (used to treat an abnormal heart rhythm) Changes in blood chemistry (such as a low potassium level)\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The most common cause of stroke from an arrhythmia is atrial fibrillation. Atrial fibrillation can cause blood clots to form in the atria (top chamber of the heart) where they can be pumped out of the heart, to the brain, blocking a blood vessel and causing a stroke.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Atrial fibrillation (A-fib) is a type of cardiac arrhythmia, or irregular heartbeat. In a healthy heart, blood moves into your atria and then into your ventricles. The ventricles are the lower chambers of your heart. From there, blood flows around your body and back to your heart.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia is a type of arrhythmia (irregular heartbeat). Paroxysmal means that the episode of arrhythmia begins and ends abruptly. Atrial means that arrhythmia starts in the atria or upper chambers of your heart. Tachycardia means that the heart is beating abnormally fast. Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia (PAT) is also known as paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia (PSVT). Other types of tachycardia that start in the atria include atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter, and Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. PAT can cause an adult’s heart rate to increase from between 60 and 100 beats per minute to between 130 and 230 beats per minute.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: 1 Atrial fibrillation (A-fib) is a type of cardiac arrhythmia, or irregular heartbeat. 2 Blood clots are a common complication of A-fib. Blood clots can contribute to breathing problems, inconsistent blood supply, and even stroke.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Controlled Atrial Fibrillation. Cardiac output is the amount of blood pumped out to your body. A-fib happens when the slowing of your heart’s ventricles lowers your cardiac output. Controlled A-fib usually results in a heart rate less than 100 beats per minute (BPM)."
] |
Heart's upper chambers.
|
[
"Passage 2"
] |
what is turmeric herb good for
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Botanical name: Curcuma longa Belonging to the ginger family, turmeric has been used in East India and the Middle East for thousands of years, and is now one of the most highly-prized spices in the world.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: You probably know turmeric as the main spice in curry. It has a warm, bitter taste and is frequently used to flavor or color curry powders, mustards, butters, and cheeses. But the root of turmeric is also used widely to make medicine.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: TURMERIC Overview Information. Turmeric is a plant. You probably know turmeric as the main spice in curry. It has a warm, bitter taste and is frequently used to flavor or color curry powders, mustards, butters, and cheeses. But the root of turmeric is also used widely to make medicine.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Print. Botanical name: Curcuma longa Belonging to the ginger family, turmeric has been used in East India and the Middle East for thousands of years, and is now one of the most highly-prized spices in the world.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Botanical name: Curcuma longa Belonging to the ginger family, turmeric has been used in East India and the Middle East for thousands of years, and is now one of the most highly-prized spices in the world. It's actually unclear whether it was first used for its peppery flavor and the unique kick it lends to foods.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Turmeric is a plant. You probably know turmeric as the main spice in curry. It has a warm, bitter taste and is frequently used to flavor or color curry powders, mustards, butters, and cheeses. But the root of turmeric is also used widely to make medicine.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: You probably know turmeric as the main spice in curry. It has a warm, bitter taste and is frequently used to flavor or color curry powders, mustards, butters, and cheeses.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Tips on Turmeric. Botanical name: Curcuma longa. Belonging to the ginger family, turmeric has been used in East India and the Middle East for thousands of years, and is now one of the most highly-prized spices in the world.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: But the root of turmeric is also used widely to make medicine. Turmeric is used for arthritis, heartburn (dyspepsia), stomach pain, diarrhea, intestinal gas, stomach bloating, loss of appetite, jaundice, liver problems and gallbladder disorders.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Belonging to the ginger family, turmeric has been used in East India and the Middle East for thousands of years, and is now one of the most highly-prized spices in the world. It's actually unclear whether it was first used for its peppery flavor and the unique kick it lends to foods."
] |
Turmeric is used for arthritis, heartburn (dyspepsia), stomach pain, diarrhea, intestinal gas, stomach bloating, loss of appetite, jaundice, liver problems and gallbladder disorders.
|
[
"Passage 9"
] |
what carrot oil
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Carrot Seed Essential Oil. Carrot Seed Essential Oil. Produced from distillation of the seeds of the wild carrot plant, Carrot Seed has a mildly sweet aroma with earthy, herbaceous notes. Topical: Apply 2–4 drops directly to desired area. Dilution not required except for the most sensitive skin.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Scientific Name(s): Daucus carota L, subsp. sativus (Hoffm.) Archang. Family: Umbelliferae or Apiaceae. Common Name(s): Oil of carrot , Queen Anne's lace , wild carrot. Lab studies show that carrot seed oil, which had a wide range of applications in folk medicine, acts as a muscle relaxant and vasodilator.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Carrot Oil. Scientific Name(s): Daucus carota L, subsp. sativus (Hoffm.) Archang. Family: Umbelliferae or Apiaceae. Common Name(s): Oil of carrot , Queen Anne's lace , wild carrot. Uses. Lab studies show that carrot seed oil, which had a wide range of applications in folk medicine, acts as a muscle relaxant and vasodilator.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Carrot seed oil. Carrot seed (Daucus carota) essential oil in clear glass vial. Carrot seed oil is the essential oil extract of the seed from the carrot plant Daucus carota. The oil has a woody, earthy sweet smell and is yellow or amber-coloured to pale orange-brown in appearance.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: A homemade blend of dry-skin body oil, for example, might contain 1 oz. carrot root oil, 8 oz. olive oil, sunflower oil or hazelnut oil, and about 125 drops of two or more essential oils. Like carrot root carrier oil, carrot seed essential oil works best in a blended formula, according to Rose.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Carrots, Carrot Juice, Carrot Seed Oil, Carrot Oil. Carrots. Carrot juice. Carrots are regarded as the 'herbal healer' of skin diseases as they promote the repair of skin tissue. Carrot juice is a valuable source of Vitamin A, which is a major vitamin for skin health.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Carrot seed oil. Carrot seed oil is the essential oil extract of the seed from the carrot plant Daucus carota. The oil has a woody, earthy sweet smell and is yellow or amber-coloured to pale orange-brown in appearance.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Carrot Oil as a Skin Remedy. A bottle of carrot seed oil with a spoonful of carrot seeds and a raw carrot. As skin-healing products, carrot oils add moisture and may even provide antioxidant protection through topical application. Look for either carrot seed essential oil or carrot root carrier oil. Both possess similar skin-soothing, cell-regenerative qualities for complaints ranging from stretch marks to wrinkles.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Carrot Oil. Scientific Name(s): Daucus carota L, subsp. sativus (Hoffm.) Archang. Uses. Lab studies show that carrot seed oil, which had a wide range of applications in folk medicine, acts as a muscle relaxant and vasodilator.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: This article is about the cultivated vegetable. For other uses, see Carrot (disambiguation). The carrot (Daucus carota subsp. sativus) is a root vegetable, usually orange in colour, though purple, black, red, white, and yellow cultivars exist. Carrots are a domesticated form of the wild carrot, Daucus carota, native to Europe and southwestern Asia."
] |
Carrot seed oil is the essential oil extract of the seed from the carrot plant Daucus carota.
|
[
"Passage 7"
] |
where is ripley tn
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: SO, WHAT’S INSIDE? The only place in Gatlinburg where you’ll find shrunken heads, a 12ft tall scrap car parts robot sculpture, an authentic vampire killing kit, one-of-a-kind artwork, tons of hands-on interactives, and a wicked spinning vortex tunnel! BUY TICKETS.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Pricing Information. *Prices are based on 1-21 day travel. These are the best fares found by travelers who searched TripAdvisor and a select group of our fare search partners in the past 72 hours. Ticket prices and seat availability change rapidly and cannot be guaranteed.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Get jobs by email for this search. Ripley, TN Employment Information. If you’re ready for a new and challenging job, take a look at our wide range of Ripley, Tennessee jobs. Whatever type of job in Ripley you’re seeking, you can find it on Monster. View our listings of Ripley job opportunities and find your perfect fit today. View More.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Latest news from Ripley, TN collected exclusively by city-data.com from local newspapers, TV, and radio stations. Ancestries: American (12.5%), Irish (4.7%), German (2.2%), European (1.4%), English (1.3%). Current Local Time: CST time zone.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Ripley, Tennessee. Ripley is a city in Lauderdale County, Tennessee. The population was 7,844 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Lauderdale County. The current mayor is Maurice Gaines.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Ripley, TN. Sponsored Topics. Ripley is a city in Lauderdale County, Tennessee, United States. The population was 7,844 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Lauderdale County. The current mayor is Jon Pavletic. Ripley is located at 35°44′35″N 89°32′2″W / 35.74306°N 89.53389°W / 35.74306; -89.53389 (35.743115, -89.533872).\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Experience eight unique attractions including Ripley’s Believe It or Not! Odditorium, our 85,000 sq ft Aquarium of the Smokies, a 5D Moving Theater, our bone-chilling Haunted Adventure, the mind-bending Marvelous Mirror Maze, Guinness World Records Adventure, and our two fully themed mini-golf courses!\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Ripley, Tennessee is located in Lauderdale County. Zip codes in Ripley, TN include 38063. The median home price in Ripley is $85,000 which is roughly $51/per square foot.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: >>Rachel Jackson. Ripley Planning Commission regular meetings are the 3rd Tuesday of month at 5:00 p.m. at Ripley City Hall located at 110 S. Washington St. Ripley Planning Commissions members:"
] |
In Lauderdale County, Tennessee, United States.
|
[
"Passage 6",
"Passage 5"
] |
can using marijuana before pregnancy hurt the baby
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Marijuana is the most commonly used illegal drug in the United States. A number of women who use the drug find themselves pregnant or plan on becoming pregnant. What a mom-to-be puts on her skin, eats, and smokes affects her baby. Marijuana is one substance that can potentially impact a developing baby’s health.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Women who use marijuana may smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol or use other street drugs, making it hard to know exactly how marijuana affects pregnancy. Some studies suggest that if you use marijuana during pregnancy, your baby may have problems, including: Premature birth.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: In the study, Harkany and his colleagues tested marijuana's effects in three ways: They grew brain cells from mice in the presence of THC, they injected pregnant mice with THC, and they studied the brains of electively aborted human fetuses whose mothers had used marijuana during pregnancy.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Marijuana Use During Pregnancy Affects Babies' Brain Development (STUDY) Using marijuana during pregnancy could affect a baby's brain development by interfering with how brain cells are wired, a new study in mice and human tissue suggests.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Published: 01/27/2014 06:53 AM EST on LiveScience. Using marijuana during pregnancy could affect a baby's brain development by interfering with how brain cells are wired, a new study in mice and human tissue suggests.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: When you use marijuana during pregnancy, THC and other chemicals may pass through the placenta to your baby. The placenta grows in your uterus (womb) and supplies your baby with food and oxygen through the umbilical cord. More research is needed to understand how marijuana may affect you and your baby during pregnancy.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: 1 Hormones that your body needs to get pregnant. Hormones are chemicals made by the body. 2 Your menstrual cycle. This is the process of your ovaries releasing an egg every month. A man’s sperm count (the number of sperm he makes). A man’s sperm fertilizes a woman’s egg to begin a pregnancy.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Marijuana has a chemical in it called delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (also called THC). This chemical can affect how your brain works and make it hard to think clearly. THC and other chemicals in marijuana may change your sense of sight, sound and touch. Marijuana is the most commonly used street drug during pregnancy.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The drug could have direct effects, or it could sensitize the brain to future drug exposure or neuropsychiatric illnesses. Pot during pregnancy. Previous studies have found that exposure to marijuana during pregnancy can increase a child's risk of having cognitive deficits or psychiatric disorders.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Marijuana (also known as pot, weed, or bud) is the dried portion of the Cannabis sativa plant. People smoke or eat marijuana for its effects on the body. It can cause euphoria, relaxation, and/or enhanced sensory perception. In most states, marijuana use is illegal. Marijuana’s active compound is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). This compound can cross a mother’s placenta to get to her baby during pregnancy."
] |
Yes, Using marijuana during pregnancy hurt the baby.
|
[
"Passage 4",
"Passage 2"
] |
what is the usual citi minimum credit card payment
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Credit Cards. Use this credit card minimum payment calculator to determine how long it will take to pay off credit cards if only the minimum payment is made. Enter the credit card information below and press view report to see the payoff details.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The minimum payment due policy applies to Citibank Classic Card, Citibank Gold Card, Citi Rewards Card, Citi Cash Back American Express® Card, Citi Clear Card, Citi Prestige Card, Citi PremierMiles Card, Citi Octopus Credit Card, Citi Ultima Card.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Let us consider an example for minimum amount due calculation and make some assumptions for the same. 1 The fee for late payment is Rs. 2 The credit card statement is generated at the 5th of every month. 3 Interest rate is charged at 3% every month. The payment is to made on or before 26th of every month.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: How long will it take to pay off credit cards? Use this credit card minimum payment calculator to determine how long it will take to pay off credit cards if only the minimum payment is made. Enter the credit card information below and press view report to see the payoff details.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: To decide which Citicard is right for you, compare some of Citi's best credit card offers by checking the box next to the Citicard you're interested in. You can compare up to 3 Citi credit cards side by side instantly and apply for a credit card below.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: You have debt of £3,000 on a credit card, which charges 16% APR. The minimum payment you can make is the greater of 3% or £5. Assuming the interest rate never gets lower, and you only paid the minimum payment, this debt could take over 17 years to repay. Don't become a slave to your credit card debt.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The minimum payment on your credit card is normally set at the greater of a percentage of your balance, or a cash amount, for instance 3% or £5. Added to this will be any interest due for the month, any charges incurred because of a default in payment, and possibly part of the annual fee if there is one.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Your initial credit limit is on the letter that came with your. card. We’ve made part of your credit limit available for cash. advances. When you use your account, your account balance. and cash advance balance have to stay below their limits. If you go over a limit, you still must pay us. Also, please be. aware we may change your credit or cash advance limit at. any time without notice.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Here are some of the advantages of paying the minimum due every month. 1 The Minimum Amount Due (MAD) is the amount that you pay to the concerned credit card company on or before the due date to keep your credit card active and to keep the card account operative. Making the Minimum Amount Due Payment will ensure that you will have to pay only the interest when required.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: View & Compare All Citi Credit Cards. Citi®offers you a selection of credit cards with a diverse range of benefits and rewards to fit your needs - from low introductory APR on balance transfers to student credit card offers. .. Choose a credit card below and explore a variety of unique features - including easy-to-earn points or cash back rewards."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
how to remove accounts older than seven years from your credit report
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Credit Reporting Agency (CRA) Remove Old Info Letter (View Letter) Use this letter to remove outdated or expired information from your credit reports! The Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) requires most information over 7 years old to be removed from personal credit reports.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Dispute Template Letter – 7 Year Reporting Period Has Expired. NOTE: Use this letter to dispute negative accounts that are past the 7-year reporting period. The 7-year clock starts ticking 180 days from the date (month and year) of the first missed payment that led to charge off, collection, foreclosure or repossession.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Civil judgments related to credit accounts, such as defaulted auto loans, are recorded in the public record section of your credit report. Judgments must be removed from your report after 7 years, but from the date of the judgment, not the date of first delinquency of the account. So, each time a collector is granted a judgment to collect a debt, the judgment will appear on your credit report and will remain for 7 years from the date of the judgment.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: How to remove 7 year ago creditors off our credit report? My husband and I both have bills (which we never attempted to pay) from 7-9 years ago. Majority of them are hospital bills (shortly after we turned 18).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: If collectors are still receiving judgments for a debt that is old enough to have been removed from your credit report, I recommend you visit with an attorney to see if the debt is no longer collectible due to the statute of limitations, which is 4 years in Texas.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: You are correct that the garden variety negative items on your credit report, with the exception of a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, government debts and a few other categories, must be deleted from your report 7 years after the first date of the delinquency that resulted in the debt being charged off.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: I recently pulled a copy of my credit report on-line and found that you are reporting the following delinquent account(s) that are past the 7 year reporting time as allowed under the Fair Credit Reporting Act. The following account(s) should be deleted immediately: Creditor: [[Creditor Name]] Account Number: [[Account #]] Date of Last Delinquency: [[Date]] I understand that per the Fair Credit Reporting Act, you are required to notify me of your investigation results within 30 days.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: So, when you do the math, the 7 year reporting period is really 7 ½ years (from the last missed payment) that you can expect the derogatory item to come off of your credit report. Remember: Only send this letter to the bureau(s) that are reporting the derogatory information.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: What I want you to do is dispute the collection account item(s) on your credit report with the bureau reporting it. Be sure to provide information on the original credit card account that is the source of the debt and that it is past the 7-year reporting period.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: {add CRA address here}. Dear {credit reporting agency}. This letter is a formal request to remove outdated information from my credit report. For easy reference, I've enclosed a copy of the credit report that your organization provided me on {insert date of report} with the outdated items circled in red. I've also listed the items below: Line Item {insert number}:"
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what are buffers
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A buffer routine or storage medium used in telecommunications compensates for a difference in rate of flow of data, or time of occurrence of events, when transferring data from one device to another. Buffers are used for many purposes, including: 1 Interconnecting two digital circuits operating at different rates,\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: A buffer solution is one which resists changes in pH when small quantities of an acid or an alkali are added to it. Acidic buffer solutions. An acidic buffer solution is simply one which has a pH less than 7. Acidic buffer solutions are commonly made from a weak acid and one of its salts-often a sodium salt. A common example would be a mixture of ethanoic acid and sodium ethanoate in solution. In this case, if the solution contained equal molar concentrations of both the acid and the salt, it would have a pH of 4.76.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: They keep the pH constant in the alkaline range.Single salt buffer: They consist of a salt of a weak acid and weak base and maintian the pH constant at 7,i.e., the neutral pH. In organisms, metabolic reactions are usually pH-specific. The reactions function best at the optimum pH.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Buffers are typically used when there is a difference between the rate at which data is received and the rate at which it can be processed, or in the case that these rates are variable, for example in a printer spooler or in online video streaming.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Buffers are usually of three types: Acidic buffers: They consist of a weak acid and its salt of a strong base. Th … ey keep the pH constant in the acidic range.Basic buffers: They consist of a weak base and its salt of a strong acid.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Typically, the data is stored in a buffer as it is retrieved from an input device (such as a microphone) or just before it is sent to an output device (such as speakers). However, a buffer may be used when moving data between processes within a computer. This is comparable to buffers in telecommunication. Buffers can be implemented in a fixed memory location in hardware—or by using a virtual data buffer in software, pointing at a location in the physical memory. In all cases, the data stored in a data buffer are stored on a physical storage medium.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The contents of the stack pointer and program counter are loaded into the address buffer and address-data buffer. These buffers are then used to drive the external address bus … and address-data bus. As the memory and I/O chips are connected to these buses, the CPU can exchange desired data to the memory and I/O chips.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Alkaline buffer solutions An alkaline buffer solution has a pH greater than 7. Alkaline buffer solutions are commonly made from a weak base and one of its salts. A frequently used example is a mixture of ammonia solution and ammonium chloride solution.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Definition A buffer solution is one which resists changes in pH when small quantities of an acid or an alkali are added to it. Acidic buffer solutions An acidic buffer solution is simply one which has a pH less than 7. Acidic buffer solutions are commonly made from a weak acid and one of its salts-often a sodium salt. A common example would be a mixture of ethanoic acid and sodium ethanoate in solution.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Another Answer: A buffer is an aqueous solution that has a highly stable pH. If you add acid or base to a buffered solution, its pH will not change significantly. Similarly, adding water to a buffer or allowing water to evaporate will not change the pH of a buffer."
] |
One which resists changes in pH when small quantities of an acid or an alkali are added to it.
|
[
"Passage 9",
"Passage 10"
] |
the social work definition of youth prevention services
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: (Tunstill and Aldgate 2000). This can mean making services available earlier, but also concerns how the social work role and task is defined. Thus, from a range of sources there emerges a strong case for concluding that social workers have a potentially important role in prevention and early intervention.his paper has been commissioned to inform the 21st Century Review of Social Work. In its interim report, the review team reported social workers' claims that the impact of their work would increase if they were able to work in a preventative way and to intervene with families at an earlier stage.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Depending upon the culture and the community, different services and institutions may exist for this purpose. In the United Kingdom youth work is the process of creating an environment where young people can engage in informal educational activities.Different varieties of youth work include centre-based work, detached work, school-based work and religion based work.his form of youth work is carried out in schools and is provided directly for the pupils, often by an organisation external from the school. It may include lessons, assemblies, after-school clubs, one to one mentoring etc.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: 1 These definitions based on stage of problem development are widely used within the literature on children's services. 2 However within social work services 'prevention' is also used to refer to activity which aims to avoid the need for more intrusive or intensive services, for example accommodation away from home.his paper has been commissioned to inform the 21st Century Review of Social Work. In its interim report, the review team reported social workers' claims that the impact of their work would increase if they were able to work in a preventative way and to intervene with families at an earlier stage.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: 1 This paper was commissioned as part of the 21st Century Review of Social Work. 2 Its remit was to report on research based evidence of the effectiveness of 'prevention' and 'early intervention' activities by statutory social workers and to provide clear definitions of these terms.his paper has been commissioned to inform the 21st Century Review of Social Work. In its interim report, the review team reported social workers' claims that the impact of their work would increase if they were able to work in a preventative way and to intervene with families at an earlier stage.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: This module focuses on the role that social workers play in the prevention of alcohol abuse and dependence. An often-told anecdote points out the distinction between, and the interconnectedness of, treatment and prevention efforts: useful way to think about prevention is to spell out some of the approaches or principles within each of the domains in Table 1. These types of efforts are typically made in prevention programs and can act as a guide for social workers when thinking about prevention efforts to target alcohol use disorders.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The International Federation of Social Workers says of social work today that. social work is a practice-based profession and an academic discipline that promotes social change and development, social cohesion, and the empowerment and liberation of people. historic and defining feature of social work is the profession's focus on individual well-being in a social context and the well-being of society. Social workers promote social justice and social change with and on behalf of clients.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Social work is a broad profession that encompasses its activities in fields like Health and Mental Health, Social Service Administration, Children and Their Families, Social Work Policy Analysis, Social Justice and Diversity, Forensic and Traumatology, Gerontology...etc. historic and defining feature of social work is the profession's focus on individual well-being in a social context and the well-being of society. Social workers promote social justice and social change with and on behalf of clients.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: CODE OF ETHICS. A Code of Ethics is intended to serve as a guide to the everyday professional conduct of social workers (e.g., NASW’s Code of Ethics: http://www.naswdc.org/pubs/code/default.asp) and delineates the standards and principles that guide the conduct and professional practice of social workers. nation’s system of programs, benefits and services that help people meet those social, economic, educational, and health needs that are fundamental to the maintenance of society (Barker, 2003).\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Moving From Strategies to Programs. CSAP (1995) provides a guide for program development and implementation that may be useful for social workers involved in prevention work. Some of the key steps are: (1) Define the problem in such a way that you can target the underlying contributing factors. useful way to think about prevention is to spell out some of the approaches or principles within each of the domains in Table 1. These types of efforts are typically made in prevention programs and can act as a guide for social workers when thinking about prevention efforts to target alcohol use disorders.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: SOCIAL WORKER. Graduates of schools of social work (in the U.S.A. with either bachelor’s, master’s or doctoral degrees) who use their knowledge and skills to provide social services for clients (who may be individuals, families, groups, communities, organizations, or society in general). nation’s system of programs, benefits and services that help people meet those social, economic, educational, and health needs that are fundamental to the maintenance of society (Barker, 2003)."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
symptom sore swollen tongue
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Canker sore: A canker sore, also known as an aphthous ulcer, is a single pale or yellow ulcer with a red outer ring or a cluster of such ulcers in the mouth, usually on the cheeks, tongue, or inside the lip. Cold sores : Also called fever blisters, cold sores are fluid-filled sores that occur on or around the lips.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Pain or discomfort, Sore tongue, Soreness or burning inside of mouth, Swollen tongue. Sore tongue, Swollen tongue, Tenderness to touch, White patches on tongue. Smooth tongue, Swollen tongue. Smooth tongue, Sore tongue, Swollen tongue, White patches on tongue.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Lump or bulge, Pain or discomfort, Sore tongue, Swollen tongue. Pain or discomfort, Soreness or burning inside of mouth, Swollen tongue. Grooved tongue, Red (strawberry) tongue, Sore tongue, Swollen tongue. Sore tongue, Soreness or burning inside of mouth, Swollen tongue, Tenderness to touch.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: WebMD Symptom Checker helps you find the most common symptom combinations and medical conditions related to swollen tongue. Click on the combination that matches your symptoms to find the conditions that may cause these problems. Or click on See All Conditions to see every condition related to swollen tongue.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Stomatitis, a general term for an inflamed and sore mouth, can disrupt a person's ability to eat, talk, and sleep. Stomatitis can occur anywhere in the mouth, including the inside of the cheeks, gums, tongue, lips, and palate.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: In addition to allergies, non-allergic causes of a swollen tongue can include: 1 An infection in or on the tongue. 2 A tumor or mass. 3 An insect bite or sting on the tongue that causes swelling, even though it might not trigger an allergic reaction.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: There are many things that can make your tongue to become sore or cause painful bumps to form, including: 1 Trauma. 2 Smoking. 3 Canker sores. Burning tongue 1 syndrome. Enlarged papillae. Certain medical 1 conditions. Oral cancer.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: There are a variety of causes for a number of common tongue symptoms. Fortunately, the majority of tongue problems are not serious and most can be resolved quickly. In some instances, though, a discolored or painful tongue can indicate more serious conditions, including vitamin deficiencies, AIDS, or oral cancer.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Certain medical conditions. Medical conditions, including diabetes and anemia, can have a sore tongue as a symptom. Oral cancer. Though most sore tongues are nothing to worry about, you should consult a doctor if you have a lump or sore on your tongue that doesn't go away within a week or two.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Nobody knows what exactly causes canker sores, but many things may contribute to their development, such as certain medications, trauma to the mouth, poor nutrition, stress, bacteria or viruses, lack of sleep, sudden weight loss, and certain foods such as potatoes, citrus fruits, coffee, chocolate, cheese, and nuts."
] |
Medical conditions, including diabetes and anemia, can have a sore tongue as a symptom.
|
[
"Passage 9"
] |
who was the movie critic who died of throat cancer
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Life Itself traces the career of the pioneering US journalist, who helped to democratise film criticism through his TV shows and newspaper columns. • The real Roger Ebert. • Peter Bradshaw review of Life Itself. The critic Roger Ebert with his wife, Chaz, from the documentary Life Itself, directed by Steve James.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Charles Bronson Actor, Once Upon a Time in the West The archetypal screen tough guy with weatherbeaten features--one film critic described his rugged looks as a Clark Gable who had been left out in the sun too long--Charles Bronson was born Charles Buchinsky, one of 15 children of struggling parents in Pennsylvania.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Paul Newman Actor, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid Screen legend, superstar, and the man with the most famous blue eyes in movie history, Paul Leonard Newman was born on January 26, 1925, in Cleveland, Ohio, the second son of Theresa (Fetsko) and Arthur Sigmund Newman.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Roger Ebert. Roger Joseph Ebert (/ˈiːbərt/; June 18, 1942 – April 4, 2013) was an American film critic and historian, journalist, screenwriter, and author. He was a film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times from 1967 until his death in 2013. In 1975, Ebert became the first film critic to win the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Dom DeLuise Actor, History of the World: Part I As might be said for the late and great comedians Harvey Korman and Madeline Kahn, it seems that Mel Brooks was the only director on the planet who knew how to best utilize this funnyman's talents on film.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Film critic Roger Ebert s long battle with head and neck cancer demonstrates the complexity of treating this relatively rare disease, a top cancer specialist tells Newsmax Health. Cancers that occur in the head and neck can be very complicated to treat, says Richard... Roger Ebert,head and neck cancer,Richard Borrowdale,M.D.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The Doctor (1991 film) The Doctor is a 1991 drama film directed by Randa Haines. It is loosely based on Dr. Edward Rosenbaum's 1988 book, A Taste Of My Own Medicine. The film stars William Hurt as Jack MacKee, a doctor who undergoes a transformation in his views about life, illness and human relationships.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Roger Ebert: the man who revolutionised movie criticism gets his own film. The critic Roger Ebert with his wife, Chaz, from the documentary Life Itself, directed by Steve James. Roger Ebert loved to share a good story. Life Itself, a documentary on the late Chicago Sun-Times film critic, shows Ebert telling one of his own. There he was, in hospital, recovering from surgery for cancer of the jawbone.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: ABC News. Joyful Critic Joel Siegel, Gone at 63. Surrounded by family and friends, ABC's beaming and insightful movie critic Joel Siegel has died in New York, after a long and remarkably courageous struggle with cancer, at the age of 63.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Film critic Roger Ebert’s long battle with head and neck cancer demonstrates the complexity of treating this relatively rare disease, a top cancer specialist tells Newsmax Health."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
do barred owl pairs nest together
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Although barred owls prefer to nest in tree cavities, this species is known to use empty hawk nests, crows nests, or squirrel nests. A clutch of usually two to three eggs (range is from 1 to 5) will be laid in the nest; the female incubates the eggs for 28-33 days.ecause barred owls rely on large tree cavities for nests, they are most often found in old growth forests. In areas where logging has reduced the extent of old growth habitats, barred owls may become threatened.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Young owls fledge (begin to fly) four to five weeks after hatching. Barred owl parents will care for their young for up to four months, much longer than most owl species. Sexes are alike in plumage but the female is larger. Pairs do stay together for life but if one mate is killed the remaining one will find a new mate.Feeding Habits. Their diet consists of mice, voles, moles, rabbits, chipmunks, squirrels, foxes, opossums, and birds. Barred owls occasionally wade into water in order to capture fish or terrapins.here is some belief that barred owls are one of the factors in the decline of spotted owls. Great horned owls are the most serious predatory threat to the barred owl. Although they often live in the same areas, the barred owl will avoid parts of its territory occupied by a great horned owl.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Barred owl females are larger than males. Males are 48 cm in length and have a mean weight of 630 g, whereas females are 51cm in length and have an average weight of 800g. The wingspan of barred owls is between 107 and 111 cm. Juveniles are a red-brown color with buff barring on the neck.ecause barred owls rely on large tree cavities for nests, they are most often found in old growth forests. In areas where logging has reduced the extent of old growth habitats, barred owls may become threatened.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Barred Owl. Strix varia. The rich baritone hooting of the Barred Owl is a characteristic sound in southern swamps, where members of a pair often will call back and forth to each other. Although the bird is mostly active at night, it will also call and even hunt in the daytime.ost common in deciduous or mixed woods in southeast, but in north and northwest may be found in mature coniferous trees. The rich baritone hooting of the Barred Owl is a characteristic sound in southern swamps, where members of a pair often will call back and forth to each other.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Most common in deciduous or mixed woods in southeast, but in north and northwest may be found in mature coniferous trees. The rich baritone hooting of the Barred Owl is a characteristic sound in southern swamps, where members of a pair often will call back and forth to each other.Although the bird is mostly active at night, it will also call and even hunt in the daytime.ost common in deciduous or mixed woods in southeast, but in north and northwest may be found in mature coniferous trees. The rich baritone hooting of the Barred Owl is a characteristic sound in southern swamps, where members of a pair often will call back and forth to each other.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Barred Owl (Strix varia). Young Barred Owls begin exploring the world outside the nest at about four weeks of age. We can often see the babes peering out from the opening a week or so before any actually appear on a nearby branch. As is true for most North American owls, young hatch two to three days apart.arred Owl (Strix varia). Young Barred Owls begin exploring the world outside the nest at about four weeks of age. We can often see the babes peering out from the opening a week or so before any actually appear on a nearby branch. As is true for most North American owls, young hatch two to three days apart.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The barred owl’s nest is often in a tree cavity. It may also take over an old nesting site used by a crow or squirrel. Barred owls are a non-migratory bird but may wander after the nesting season. If a nest site has proved suitable in the past, they’ll often reuse it.here is some belief that barred owls are one of the factors in the decline of spotted owls. Great horned owls are the most serious predatory threat to the barred owl. Although they often live in the same areas, the barred owl will avoid parts of its territory occupied by a great horned owl.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Barred owls are large, round-headed, woodland owls with grey-white faces. The plumage is grey-brown with buff-white edges and brown bars on the wings. Barred owls have brown eyes and lack ear tufts. The neck and upper breast have transverse barring and the belly contains vertical brown streaks.ecause barred owls rely on large tree cavities for nests, they are most often found in old growth forests. In areas where logging has reduced the extent of old growth habitats, barred owls may become threatened.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Barred owls are one of the larger owls in this area. On average, they range in size from 17 to 22 inches, have a 39 - 43 inch wingspan, and weigh 1.5 to 2 pounds. Unlike most other large owls in this area, they have brown eyes (as opposed to yellow).here is some belief that barred owls are one of the factors in the decline of spotted owls. Great horned owls are the most serious predatory threat to the barred owl. Although they often live in the same areas, the barred owl will avoid parts of its territory occupied by a great horned owl.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Because barred owls rely on large tree cavities for nests, they are most often found in old growth forests. In areas where logging has reduced the extent of old growth habitats, barred owls may become threatened.ecause barred owls rely on large tree cavities for nests, they are most often found in old growth forests. In areas where logging has reduced the extent of old growth habitats, barred owls may become threatened."
] |
Yes
|
[
"Passage 1"
] |
what museum has the spruce goose
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: SPRUCE GOOSE: a new home! There's a new man in the museum directors office; noted flyer and former director of Pearson Air Museum of Vancouver, Washington, Gary Thompson.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: You must have javascript enabled to use this website. To inspire and educate, promote and preserve aviation and space history, and honor the patriotic service of our veterans. The Museum and The Waterpark are 501C3 organizations and our IRS Form 990 is available upon request.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The Spruce Goose's home is a respected aviation museum, which is part of an investigation by the state of Oregon. Here's the story: In 1992, Evergreen Aviation and Space Museum in McMinnville, Oregon, struck a half-million-dollar deal with Aero Club of Southern California to buy the legendary plane.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The museum has been dedicated to the memory of Capt. Michael King Smith. (this F-15 display has been erected in his honor and will greet visitors to the new facility) There is a real passion to get the project off the ground now, the group is more determined than ever to complete the museum.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Howard Hughes' 'Spruce Goose': Museum housing giant seaplane is part of investigation. (CNN) -- Bob Lyon remembers the day he met Howard Hughes. He also recalls when Hughes nearly crashed a plane into his boyhood home. Nearly 40 years after Hughes died, Lyon's life still crosses paths with the eccentric billionaire.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Lawyers for the Aero Club and the museum said the Spruce Goose was separate and protected from the 2013 bankruptcy of Evergreen Aviation, as well as the the December bankruptcy of Evergreen Vintage Aircraft, a for-profit affiliate of the non-profit museum that owned its real estate and many of its planes.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The Spruce Goose only ever spent a few minutes in flight, but its fate has been up in the air for years now. Howard Hughes' famous H-4 Hercules flying boat has called McMinnville's Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum its home since 1993, but the museum still owed a final payment to the Aero Club of Southern California to transfer ownership.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum. The Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum is an aviation museum which displays a number of military and civilian aircraft and spacecraft, most notably, the Hughes H-4 Hercules Spruce Goose. The museum is located in McMinnville, Oregon, across the street from the headquarters of Evergreen International Aviation.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Select an Item. To inspire and educate, promote and preserve aviation and space history, and honor the patriotic service of our veterans. The Museum and The Waterpark are 501C3 organizations and our IRS Form 990 is available upon request.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Construction on the museum was planned to begin almost immediately after the flying boat arrived in McMinnville but has been on hold until recently. Evergreen International, the main contributor to the effort, fell on temporary hard times forcing a delay early on in the project."
] |
Museum in McMinnville, Oregon
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 8"
] |
what is a frond on a fern
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Definition of frond. 1 1 : a large leaf (especially of a palm or fern) usually with many divisions. 2 2 : a thallus or thalloid shoot (as of a lichen or seaweed) resembling a leaf.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The typical fern leaf, often termed a frond, is an elaborate structure composed of numerous leaflets the frond comprises two parts stipe and blade. Frond' is commonly used to identify a large, compound leaf, but if the term botanically refer leaves of ferns, it may be applied smaller and undivided. Frond definition & structure plants gardening fern of a about fernsintroduction to ferns uw green bay. Underlay of a fern science learning hub. The stipe is the leaf stem, stalk or stem petiole.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: After the foliage dies back in the fall, cut the stems to the ground and mulch over the roots with a thick cover of evergreen fern fronds. Infected palms can be hard to spot because the larvae live inside their host trees; residents should look for dead and drooping fronds, as well as damage to the palm’s crown.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Like all leaves, fronds usually have a stalk connecting them to the main stem 23 may 2014 fern are leaves of ferns and major organ. The leaf plan in practically all ferns is pinnate that is, fronds some wisconsin fern species may be as small one inch long, or large 3 more feet long other.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Anatomy of fern fronds. The anatomy of a fern frond is relatively simple. They have a stalk which connects the base of the frond to the rest of the tree and runs along the entire length of the frond to the tip. The stalk can be separated into two parts: the stipe, which is the section of the stalk before any leafy part of the frond, and the rachis, the section with leafy tissue.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Anatomy of fern fronds The anatomy of a fern frond is relatively simple. They have a stalk which connects the base of the frond to the rest of the tree and runs along the entire length of the frond to the tip.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: frond wikipedia en. Frond wikipediabasic biology. Dimorphism means having two forms; That the sterile and fertile fronds look most conspicuous part of fern sporophyte is leaf. The blade makes up the balance of frond see a rich collection stock images, vectors, or photos for fern you can buy on shutterstock. Googleusercontent search. Each sporangium is a capsule that contains spores. What is a fern frond? Fern frond stock images, royalty free images & vectors ferns cornell blog university.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Its frond is thin and membranous, with a well-defined midrib. The root is covered with woolly fibres, and the frond is regularly forked. The frond is flat, with a distinct midrib, and a non-serrated edge. Keep your glance on a frond of the fern just beyond him, and he will stay. There was not a frond of bracken, a blade of grass, that did not bend listeningly. If a woodlark stirred, he saw the shadow of its wing flit from frond to frond.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Recent Examples of frond from the Web. Meanwhile, toss together thinly sliced large fennel bulb, chopped fennel fronds, celery ribs, red onion, 2 tablespoons olive oil, and fresh lemon juice. But delicate raffia palm fronds can also be spun into fabric that resembles grasscloth — for a third of the price, says Frank.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Fern fronds are the leaves of ferns. They are a major organ of a fern and range significantly between species. Some species of tree ferns have fronds that grow as large as 5 m long while other species are limited to growing frond only 1 cm in length."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
how to wash permanent press cycle
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The Regular or Normal Cycle. In a basic washing machine, the regular or normal cycle will create the longest cycle with the most agitation. And for a soiled, dirty, sweaty typical load of clothes this is the cycle you want to choose. The normal cycle often lasts anywhere from 8 to 15 minutes.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Most last for only a couple of minutes. If you desire a longer soak – fill the machine, add clothes and soaking aids (such as a presoak enzyme product) and then turn the machine off. When ready to resume the laundry, turn the machine back on, selecting the appropriate wash cycle.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: In the washer, the permanent press cycle agitates and spins more gently. These fabrics aren't heavy-weight, and don't need the stronger spin to get out enough water. In the dryer, this cycle has a cool-down time (the last 10 minutes of the cycle).\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The permanent press wash cycle washes with warm water, rinses with cold water, and has a mild agitation cycle which is more gentle on clothes. This cycle is appropriate for regularly worn color garments. Continue Reading.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The speed of the wash cycle and the spin cycle are often displayed on the machine itself, especially on older models. For example: “fast/slow” means that the cycle will produce a fast, highly agitated washing cycle and a slow spin cycle. Note that ‘fast’ in this instance means ‘vigorous’, ‘brisk’, or ‘intense’.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The permanent press wash cycle washes with warm water, rinses with cold water, and has a mild agitation cycle which is more gentle on clothes. This cycle is appropriate for regularly worn color garments. Keep Learning.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The Permanent Press cycle lasts on average from 7-10 minutes and uses a ‘fast/slow’ combination. Again, it uses the vigorous speed of the actual washing cycle and uses a slow spin cycle. While the slow spin cycle does not extract as much water from the clothes, it does prevent a good amount of wrinkling.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Washer Cycle. Regular Cycles usually provide a wash time of 10-14 minutes with a normal agitation and spin intensity. This is a good cycle for most cottons, linens, work and play clothes. If you are energy conscious, many resources report that a 10 minute cycle is usually sufficient for commonly soiled garments.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Wash cycles. Wash cycles are the types of programs your washer uses to do its job. They comprise a washing cycle in the beginning, a rest period, a rinse and then a spin to remove the water. Sometimes there are more than one rinse and spin to get clothes extra clean. Most washers have a regular (or normal, or cotton) cycle, a permanent press (also called colors) cycle, and a delicate cycle. Some have a hand-wash cycle for ultradelicate items and a bulky cycle for blankets or pillows.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The permanent press cycle does a gentle wash and does not spin the washing so fast, so it does not crease the clothing. it allows for permanent press fabrics to be hung and allowed to dry without creases. it usually is a much shorter cycle. domestic godess · 10 years ago."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
how old does a car have to be to be exempt from road tax
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Vehicles exempt from paying the tax: Old vehicles constructed before 1 January 1973 (historic vehicles) All vehicles except buses and lorries used commercially, that were constructed before 1 January 1973 may tax in the 'historic vehicle' tax class.ubmit. · just now. Report Abuse. A car has to be registered before 1973 before it is tax exempt...we had a VW camper and were looking forward to being exempt at 25 years old, but when I checked with ministry of transport I was told it had to be reg before 1973!!!!\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Submit. · just now. Report Abuse. A car has to be registered before 1973 before it is tax exempt...we had a VW camper and were looking forward to being exempt at 25 years old, but when I checked with ministry of transport I was told it had to be reg before 1973!!!!Big disappointment i can tell you.Source(s): personal experience / M of T.ubmit. · just now. Report Abuse. A car has to be registered before 1973 before it is tax exempt...we had a VW camper and were looking forward to being exempt at 25 years old, but when I checked with ministry of transport I was told it had to be reg before 1973!!!!\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Certain vehicles are considered exempt and are not required to be titled. New Hampshire does not title motor vehicles that have a model year of 1999 or older (see below for exceptions) or on any of the vehicles listed below:itle Apply for a Title. Certain vehicles are considered exempt and are not required to be titled. New Hampshire does not title motor vehicles that have a model year of 1999 or older (see below for exceptions) or on any of the vehicles listed below: Vehicles Not Required to be Titled in New Hampshire. 1 Boats.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Kenthepipe. 2 years ago. Frankly speaking I think the 25 year exemption should now be scrapped, and replaced with say an annual road tax fee of £60 for all classics that are insured on a classic car insurance scheme, and the vehicle does no more than 1500 miles per annum.weet. The Government’s announcement that UK road tax exemption will be extended by a year to pre-’74 classics does not signal the reintroduction of a rolling scheme, C&SC can reveal.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Title Apply for a Title. Certain vehicles are considered exempt and are not required to be titled. New Hampshire does not title motor vehicles that have a model year of 1999 or older (see below for exceptions) or on any of the vehicles listed below: Vehicles Not Required to be Titled in New Hampshire. 1 Boats.2 Mopeds.itle Apply for a Title. Certain vehicles are considered exempt and are not required to be titled. New Hampshire does not title motor vehicles that have a model year of 1999 or older (see below for exceptions) or on any of the vehicles listed below: Vehicles Not Required to be Titled in New Hampshire. 1 Boats.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Best Answer: It must have been manufactured (not necessarily registered) before the 31st of December 1972. http://www.direct.gov.uk/en/Motoring/Own... When tax exemption was conceived by the Tories, it was designed to use a 25 year old rolling date to determine tax exemption.And this continued for a couple of years until the Labour Party got hold of the concept.hen tax exemption was conceived by the Tories, it was designed to use a 25 year old rolling date to determine tax exemption. And this continued for a couple of years until the Labour Party got hold of the concept.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: When a vehicle is acquired for nominal or no monetary consideration, tax must be based on the average value of similar vehicles. In-Lieu of: $10 is collected on passenger vehicles 10 model years old and older (does not apply to motorcycles).ales Tax Guideline for Older Cars. If a vehicle is at least 10 model years old and has a resale value of $3,000 or more, sales tax is due on the purchase price of the vehicle or fair market value (whichever is greater.) It does not qualify for the $10 flat sales tax.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Originally Posted by howlin-murdock Hi all, I recently brought a car, it's from 1981 (old W reg) so its about 27/28 years old but I was wondering how old does a car have to be for you not to pay road tax-I always thought it was 25 years and over? - any ideas? Thanking you in advance.riginally Posted by howlin-murdock Hi all, I recently brought a car, it's from 1981 (old W reg) so its about 27/28 years old but I was wondering how old does a car have to be for you not to pay road tax-I always thought it was 25 years and over? - any ideas? Thanking you in advance.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: In the Overview of Legislation and Tax rates for 2014-'15, the treasury states that the rolling benefit will affect around 10,000 classic car owners per year, who are currently paying VED, but will be newly exempt from 2015.here's good news for classic car owners in the 2014 budget. From April 2014, the classic car exemption from VED will begin rolling from 40 years, with cars built before January 1974 eligible for a zero-rated tax disc. Then, from January 2015, the formerly fixed cut-off, will become a rolling one.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: RB, East Molesey. These 1973 cars did not actually become exempt until April 2014. (In the 2014 budget, this became a rolling, 40-year-old exemption). As RB's VED became due just before then, I advised him to tax it for six months, after which he would not have to pay for a tax disc.Email your queries to [email protected] (please include your full name, postal address and phone number). have a classic car, proven to have been built in November 1973. According to a change of rules for historic vehicles in last year's budget, it should have been exempt from VED from April 1 this year. The DVLA has advised me that it is not exempt."
] |
40 years
|
[
"Passage 9",
"Passage 1"
] |
does a sim card affect data
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: A Subscriber Identity Module card does not affect a mobile phone’s cellular transmission signals, but can have an effect on the device’s ability to make a connection to its wireless service provider’s network. However, these situations have nothing to do with the device’s ability to receive or send a signal.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The SIM card is necessary if you're using a GSM iPhone. The card contains vital information about the wireless provider and contacts. The card doesn't affect reception; however, without it, you can connect to the wireless network to make or receive calls and use several of the phone's communication features.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The SIM card is provided with your iPhone (or 3G iPad) by your carrier and it is used to store data about your account. It holds information such as your phone number, security data, billing information and things which help the carrier to know who is the user of the phone.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The card doesn't affect reception; however, without it, you can connect to the wireless network to make or receive calls and use several of the phone's communication features. If the SIM card is damaged, faulty or improperly connected a “No SIM” card error usually appears on the screen.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: A SIM card contains information relevant to the mobile device, including the device’s phone number and the user’s account number, which identifies the phone to the wireless service provider. Once the identification has been made, the phone is allowed to access the provider’s network.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: A Subscriber Identity Module card does not affect a mobile phone’s cellular transmission signals, but can have an effect on the device’s ability to make a connection to its wireless service provider’s network.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: You can however, with a device called a SIM reader, view, backup, and physically delete information from the SIM card. To do this, obtain a SIM reader. It is a small USB device that plugs into your computer, and comes with software that interfaces with your SIM card.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The SIM card allows you to change cellular phones and keep the same user data. The SIM card is what lets your carrier know that you're the account holder of the iPhone using it.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: A SIM (Subscriber Identification Module) is the small card slides into the back of many smartphones on the market. It acts as on official identifier, telling your cell phone provider that your mobile phone belongs to you, and allows it to use your phone and data service.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The SIM card is a memory circuit in your cell phone that carries necessary information back and forth to your network, and it also contains some of your personal data. While the information that your service provider needs is not changeable or removable, you can control some aspects of your personal information."
] |
No
|
[
"Passage 3"
] |
causes of nose bleeding
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: If you’ve ever wiped your nose and seen blood, you’ve had a nosebleed. They’re common: One out of every seven people in the United States will get a one at some point. They’re most common in kids between 2 and 10 years old and adults between 50 and 80 years old.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Causes include: 1 Irritating or breaking to the lining of the nose. 2 Injuring the nasal tissue, which occurs more easily when nasal structure is not normal or the passages are inflamed due to a cold or allergies. 3 Having very dry nasal tissue. Picking or bumping the 1 nose. Forcefully blowing or rubbing the nose.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: You can’t always prevent nosebleeds from happening, but there are certain things you can do to help lower your chances of getting them: 1 Keep the inside of your nose moist. Dryness can cause nosebleeds. 2 Use a saline nasal product. Spraying it in your nostrils helps keep the inside of your nose moist. 3 Use a humidifier.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: A nosebleed comes either from the front of your nose (anterior) or the back of it (posterior). Anterior nosebleeds: The wall that separates your nostrils is called a septum. It has a lot blood vessels that can break from a hit in the face, or even a scratch of your fingernail.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The most common cause of anterior nose bleeds is trauma such as a blow, smack, or sometimes just picking the nose. Dryness inside of the nose can also cause bleeding. In addition, high altitudes, colds, allergies, and medications are all potential culprits for triggering a nosebleed. Smoking can dry out the nose too, so quitting is especially important for recurrent nosebleeds, among many other health benefits.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: How to Prevent Nosebleeds. Keep the inside of your nose moist. Dryness can cause nosebleeds. Use a cotton swab to gently smear a thin layer petroleum jelly in your nostrils three times a day, including before you go to sleep. You can also use an antibiotic ointment like Bacitracin or Polysporin.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: But if you get nosebleeds a lot -- there may be a reason you can pinpoint: 1 Dry climates or dry, heated air that dries out the inside of your nose. 2 Picking your nose or rubbing it too hard. 3 A cold. Repeated nose- 1 blowing. An injury to your nose. Allergies or allergy medicines that can dry out your 1 nose. Other medications you’re taking.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Causes of Anterior Nosebleeds. Most nosebleeds occur within the lower end of the nose in the lower septum—the wall separating the two airways of the nose that end in the nostrils. These blood vessels lie close to the surface, making them susceptible to injury.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: There are two types of nosebleeds: 1 Anterior nosebleed—blood coming from the front of the nose, usually the semi-rigid walls that separate the two nostrils (most common type of nosebleed) 2 Posterior nosebleed—bleeding starts deep within the nose; often more difficult to treat and more severe than an anterior nosebleed.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Anterior nosebleed—blood coming from the front of the nose, usually the semi-rigid walls that separate the two nostrils (most common type of nosebleed) Posterior nosebleed—bleeding starts deep within the nose; often more difficult to treat and more severe than an anterior nosebleed."
] |
Trauma such as a blow, smack, or sometimes just picking the nose, dryness inside of the nose, high altitudes, colds, allergies, medications and smoking.
|
[
"Passage 7",
"Passage 5"
] |
how to color overlay an image in photoshop
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The Layer option allows us to select which layer from the source image we want to blend with the target image. The Source Image Channel. Below the Layer option is the Channel option. This is where we can choose which channel from the source image we want to blend with the target image.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: select Layer > Layer style. in the window click on color overlay and select colour, opacity and mode in the right side of the window. pls note that if you apply layer style in a layer and draw some more things in the same layer the newly added things also get that colour. Also many effects like gradient overlay, Pattern Overley, Mode in Layer pallete will not work.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The Target Image, Layer and Color Mode. In the center of the dialog box, it shows the name of your target image, along with the name of the layer you had selected when you opened the Apply Image command. This is the layer you'll be blending the other image with.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: For those who would use all of our different Overlay products for Adobe Photoshop, we have put together a complete collection of all four different effects. With this complete collection, you will get “Starbursts”, “Light Rays”, “Light Leaks”, “Light Flares”, Snow and Rain bundles.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Use the selection tool to select the whole picture, and then copy and paste it into your original file. Now it looks like you’ve got your second image: However, now you’ve got two layers that you can see here: The first thing you can try is making the layer more transparent. Under Opacity, lower the second layer to 50%. If you’re still not “into” the opacity look, my favorite is the “multiply” option. The multiply option works as a transparency might. Your blacks and darks will stay black and dark, but all the light parts will be completely see-through. This is good for sketches that someone wants to color, for example.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Place your overlay into your image and resize to fit. With the overlay layer selected, add a solid color adjustment layer from the layers panel. Choose a color that you know or that is close to what you think you might like.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: There are five basic steps to applying our lighting overlays to your images. In addition to selecting your photograph, the steps involve (1)resizing, (2)choosing blend mode, (3)adjusting colors to fit the scene in your image, (4)changing the opacity, and if needed, (5)applying a layer mask.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Go to the Layers palette. Select the layer you want to create a transparent overlay for and drag it into the Create a New Layer button at the bottom of the Layers palette to duplicate it. Double-click the layer containing the duplicated layer in Photoshop's Layers palette. The Layer Style dialog box opens.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: With our “Light Flares” overlay, a collection of 14 white flares and 11 color flares, you will have the convenient ability to easily recreate the effect of sunlight that is glaring down such intensity that it causes a dazzling effect in your image which pushes right through to the foreground of your scene.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Step 3: Duplicate The Background Layer Of The Target Image. Currently, my target image (as well as my source image) is made up of only one layer, the Background layer, which we can see if we look in the Layers palette: The Layers palette in Photoshop showing the Background layer."
] |
In addition to selecting your photograph,the steps involve resizing,choosing blend mode,adjusting colors to fit the scene in your image,changing the opacity,and if needed, applying a layer mask.
|
[
"Passage 7"
] |
silent hill villains
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Pyramid Head (also known as the Red Pyramid Thing) is the name James Sunderland uses in reference to a monster who is arguably the main antagonist of Silent Hill 2, and the most well-known monster.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 36,067 pages on this wiki. These are villains from the survival horror series Silent Hill, one of the darkest yet created. Many of the villains are associated with the cult known as The Order and Alessa Gillespie.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Pyramid Head (also known as the Red Pyramid Thing) is the name James Sunderland uses in reference to a monster who is arguably the main antagonist of Silent Hill 2, and the most well-known monster. Pyramid Head's incarnation in Silent Hill: Homecoming is known as The Bogeyman.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: In Silent Hill 2, like the other creatures roaming the town, Pyramid Head is a manifestation of James' subconscious mind; his unfulfilled desire for punishment for the death of Mary Shepherd-Sunderland, coupled with a painting of a hooded executioner found in the Silent Hill Historical Society.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Believing he was interacting with Alessa, Harry accepted the child, and escaped from Silent Hill with her as God finally died. 17 years later, the child, now named Heather, was living with Harry in town far from Silent Hill.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: These are villains from the survival horror series Silent Hill, one of the darkest yet created. Many of the villains are associated with the cult known as The Order and Alessa Gillespie.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Not only that, monsters that appear in this series also very similar with Shadows from persona series due to both are portrayed as manifestation of people's subconcscious albeit in Silent Hill monster's case, only appear to certain few individuals.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Pyramid Head makes his first appearance in Silent Hill 2, in the Wood Side Apartments, standing behind a wall of bars, which separates him from James Sunderland, and bearing a red aura.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The Silent Hill series, particularly the second installment, frequently utilizes psychology and symbolism: Pyramid Head represents James' wish to be punished for Mary's death. Masahiro Ito, the designer of Silent Hill 2 's monsters, created him because he wanted a monster with a hidden face.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Chapter 1: The villains meet. After the events of Silent Hill: Homecoming, and Shattered Memories the town was once again quiet waiting for a certain prisoner to arrive to encounter the horrid nightmare."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what is poland known for
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Answer by Konrad Sitkowski. Confidence votes 22. It is famous for;the best pope in the world was from Poland.His name was John Poul the second in polish Jan Paweł II .And also the statio of a mermied is in Krakow.Kraków i was. there\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 25 things we love about Poland: The pope – To celebrate Poland's 25 years of independence, readers shared their favorite things about the country. The most famous person in Poland is arguably Pope John Paul II.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Poland is also famous for Nicolas Copernicus who was the first man to formulate a comprehensive heliocentric cosmology, which displaced the Earth from the center of the universe.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Poland is a country located in Europe It is bordered on all sides by Russia, Germany, Belarus, Solvakia, Ukraine, Czech Republic, & Lithunania. It also borders the Baltic … Sea.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Poland has survived centuries of conflict to emerge as a proud, independent country, ready to assume her new role in modern history. Visitors to Poland are discovering what the locals have long known, that Poland is a country rich in fine culture, scenic landscapes and extraordinary historical sites.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Poland is the 9th largest country in Europe by land area. 1 Seven countries share a border with Poland including Russia, Lithuania, Belarus, Slovakia, Ukraine, the Czech Republic, and Germany. 2 Poland is home to over 38 million people (38,383,809) as of July 2013. 3 Warsaw is the largest city and capital of Poland.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The official name of Poland is the Republic of Poland. Poland is the 9th largest country in Europe by land area. 1 Seven countries share a border with Poland including Russia, Lithuania, Belarus, Slovakia, Ukraine, the Czech Republic, and Germany.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Poland is bordered by Germany to the west; the Czech Republic and Slovakia to the south; Ukraine, Belarus and Lithuania to the east; and … the Baltic Sea and Kaliningrad Oblast, a Russian enclave, to the north. The capital and the largest city is Warsaw, which is in central Poland, on the Vistula River.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: 38) Pope John Paul II also known as Karol Wojtyla (1920-2005) was Polish. He was the only Polish Pope to date and served the second longest. Additionally he is credited with contributing to hastening the end of communism in Poland and throughout Central and Eastern Europe.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: It is famous for;the best pope in the world was from Poland.His name was John Poul the second in polish Jan Paweł II .And also the statio of a mermied is in Krakow.Kraków i was. there"
] |
The best pope in the world was from Poland.His name was John Poul the second in polish Jan Paweł.
|
[
"Passage 1"
] |
what is compliance management
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: appropriate. Compliance Audit A compliance audit is an independent review of an institution's compliance with consumer protection laws and regulations and adherence to internal policies and procedures. The audit helps management ensure ongoing compliance and identify compliance risk conditions.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Compliance management can take many forms. It can be a mix of policies, procedures, documentation, internal auditing, third party audits, security controls, and technological enforcement. There are two recognized models for implementing compliance management.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Compliance Audit. A compliance audit is an independent review of an. institution’s compliance with consumer protection laws. and regulations and adherence to internal policies and. procedures. The audit helps management ensure. ongoing compliance and identify compliance risk. conditions.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Governance, Risk and Compliance, or GRC for short, refers to a company's coordinated strategy for managing the broad issues of corporate governance, enterprise risk management (ERM) and corporate compliance with regard to regulatory requirements.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Compliance management can take many forms. It can be a mix of policies, procedures, documentation, internal auditing, third party audits, security controls, and technological enforcement.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Compliance Audit A compliance audit is an independent review of an institution's compliance with consumer protection laws and regulations and adherence to internal policies and procedures. The audit helps management ensure ongoing compliance and identify compliance risk conditions.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: A compliance audit is an independent review of an. institution’s compliance with consumer protection laws. and regulations and adherence to internal policies and. procedures. The audit helps management ensure. ongoing compliance and identify compliance risk. conditions.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The Compliance Management management role group is one of several built-in role groups that make up the Role Based Access Control (RBAC) permissions model in Microsoft Exchange Server 2013. Role groups are assigned one or more management roles that contain the permissions required to perform a given set of tasks.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The objective is always to integrate compliance risk management into the overall business strategy of the organization. Compliance risk management is a continuous, dynamic process of gathering, analyzing and updating information to ensure ongoing compliance with government rules and regulations.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Compliance management is the process which ensures that a set of people are following a given set of rules. The rules are referred to as the compliance standard or compliance benchmark, while the process is what manages their compliance. Compliance management can take many forms."
] |
Compliance management is the process which ensures that a set of people are following a given set of rules.
|
[
"Passage 10"
] |
what does pcr stand for
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: 1 In silico PCR (digital PCR, virtual PCR, electronic PCR, e-PCR) refers to computational tools used to calculate theoretical polymerase chain reaction results using a given set of primers (probes) to amplify DNA sequences from a sequenced genome or transcriptome.n the second step, the temperature is lowered and the two DNA strands become templates for DNA polymerase to selectively amplify the target DNA. The selectivity of PCR results from the use of primers that are complementary to the DNA region targeted for amplification under specific thermal cycling conditions.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Best Answer: Polymerase chain reaction It's a technique for amplifying a SPECIFIC gene out of an entire sample of DNA. So, instead of getting multiple copies of an entire chromosome, you get just the area you want.It works by having two primers, one for each end of the gene you want (the 5' ends on opposing strands). just now. Report Abuse. polymerase chain reaction and that's a trick question you don't just use it on genes you can use it on any DNA including promoter and junk regions, you can even use it on RNA it allows you to do an amost infinate number of things to genes, and even more stuff to things that aren't genes.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: PCR primers – short DNA sequences that bind to DNA; are complimentary to beginning and end of target sequence What is needed for a PCR reaction? Taq Polymerase Polymerase copies DNA From heat loving bacteria-Thermus aquaticus. Can survive hot temperatures needed in PCR reaction.CR primers – short DNA sequences that bind to DNA; are complimentary to beginning and end of target sequence What is needed for a PCR reaction? Taq Polymerase Polymerase copies DNA From heat loving bacteria-Thermus aquaticus. Can survive hot temperatures needed in PCR reaction.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a technology in molecular biology used to amplify a single copy or a few copies of a piece of DNA across several orders of magnitude, generating thousands to millions of copies of a particular DNA sequence.n the second step, the temperature is lowered and the two DNA strands become templates for DNA polymerase to selectively amplify the target DNA. The selectivity of PCR results from the use of primers that are complementary to the DNA region targeted for amplification under specific thermal cycling conditions.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: PCR (polymerase chain reaction) is a method to analyze a short sequence of DNA (or RNA) even in samples containing only minute quantities of DNA or RNA.PCR is used to reproduce (amplify) selected sections of DNA or RNA.Previously, amplification of DNA involved cloning the segments of interest into vectors for expression in bacteria, and took weeks. But now, with PCR done in test tubes, it takes only a few hours.CR is used to reproduce (amplify) selected sections of DNA or RNA. Previously, amplification of DNA involved cloning the segments of interest into vectors for expression in bacteria, and took weeks.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: PCR stands for Polymerase Chain Reaction, a method for amplifying DNA in vitro. Where, in cloning DNA into a plasmid, the DNA is amplified by the bacterial cell when it replicates the plasmid, PCR amplifies DNA in a test-tube. Cycling temperatures: Of the three temperatures used in a cycle of PCR, the denaturing and extension temperatures remain unchanged for the most part, since most DNA is denatured at 94-95 degrees C, and the temperature optimum for the Taq DNA polymerase lies between 72 and 74 degrees C.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Best Answer: The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a scientific technique in molecular biology to amplify a single or a few copies of a piece of DNA across several orders of magnitude, generating thousands to millions of copies of a particular DNA sequence.est Answer: The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a scientific technique in molecular biology to amplify a single or a few copies of a piece of DNA across several orders of magnitude, generating thousands to millions of copies of a particular DNA sequence.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Since PCR is, basically, replication of DNA in a test-tube, all the usual ingredients needed for DNA replication are required: A template (the DNA that is being copied) Primers (to initiate the synthesis of the new DNA strands) DNA polymerase (to carry out the synthesis) dNTPs (nucleotide precursors). Cycling temperatures: Of the three temperatures used in a cycle of PCR, the denaturing and extension temperatures remain unchanged for the most part, since most DNA is denatured at 94-95 degrees C, and the temperature optimum for the Taq DNA polymerase lies between 72 and 74 degrees C.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: · just now. Report Abuse. polymerase chain reaction and that's a trick question you don't just use it on genes you can use it on any DNA including promoter and junk regions, you can even use it on RNA it allows you to do an amost infinate number of things to genes, and even more stuff to things that aren't genes. just now. Report Abuse. polymerase chain reaction and that's a trick question you don't just use it on genes you can use it on any DNA including promoter and junk regions, you can even use it on RNA it allows you to do an amost infinate number of things to genes, and even more stuff to things that aren't genes.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: PCR. PCR (short for Polymerase Chain Reaction) is a relatively simple and inexpensive tool that you can use to focus in on a segment of DNA and copy it billions of times over.n most cases, 2 primers that are 20 or so nucleotides long will target just one place in the entire genome. Primers are also necessary because DNA polymerase can't attach at just any old place and start copying away. It can only add onto an existing piece of DNA."
] |
PCR stands for Polymerase Chain Reaction, a method for amplifying DNA in vitro.
|
[
"Passage 6",
"Passage 4"
] |
what is the island that belongs to Spain
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: 10 Best Spanish Islands. Last updated on September 29, 2015 in Beaches and Islands, Spain 2 Comments. Spain has some of the most beautiful islands in Europe. The most popular Spanish Islands are equally divided between the Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands.All have unique features along with their warm, clear water and unspoiled beaches.pain has some of the most beautiful islands in Europe. The most popular Spanish Islands are equally divided between the Balearic Islands and the Canary Islands.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Islands of Spain. The Balearic island and the Canary Islands are the two major island groups in Spain. Balearic Islands lies on the Mediterranean Sea, where as the Canary Islands lie on the Atlantic Sea. Spain is surrounded by water bodies on all the four sides.he Balearic Island in Spain is known as the Mediterranean Paradise and is primarily divided into two parts, one in the north and the other in the south west. The northern part is known as Gimnesias, which comprises of Menorca.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Submit. · just now. Report Abuse. Fiji is an island nation, it's not part of a continent!! look at a map of the south pacific, you'll find the fijian islands. they are above New Zealand's North Island; you will see Fiji flanked by Vanuatu/New Caledona to the west and Tonga to the east..ubmit. · just now. Report Abuse. Fiji is an island nation, it's not part of a continent!! look at a map of the south pacific, you'll find the fijian islands. they are above New Zealand's North Island; you will see Fiji flanked by Vanuatu/New Caledona to the west and Tonga to the east..\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The Balearic Island in Spain is known as the Mediterranean Paradise and is primarily divided into two parts, one in the north and the other in the south west. The northern part is known as Gimnesias, which comprises of Menorca.Mallorca and Cabrera.he Balearic Island in Spain is known as the Mediterranean Paradise and is primarily divided into two parts, one in the north and the other in the south west. The northern part is known as Gimnesias, which comprises of Menorca.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The islands have a Mediterranean Climate, and the four major islands are all popular tourist destinations. Ibiza in particular is known as an international party destination, attracting many of the world's most popular DJs to its nightclubs. The islands' culture and cuisine are similar to that of the rest of Spain.The archipelago forms an autonomous community and a province of Spain, with Palma de Mallorca as the capital. The co-official languages in the Balearic Islands are Catalan and Spanish.The current Statute of Autonomy declares the Balearic Islands as one nationality of Spain.he islands have a Mediterranean Climate, and the four major islands are all popular tourist destinations. Ibiza in particular is known as an international party destination, attracting many of the world's most popular DJs to its nightclubs. The islands' culture and cuisine are similar to that of the rest of Spain.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The official name of the Balearic Islands in Catalan is Illes Balears, while in Spanish they are known as the Islas Baleares. The term Balearic derives from Greek (γυμνησίαι / Gymnesiae and βαλλιαρεῖς / Balliareis).In Latin (Baleares).he islands have a Mediterranean Climate, and the four major islands are all popular tourist destinations. Ibiza in particular is known as an international party destination, attracting many of the world's most popular DJs to its nightclubs. The islands' culture and cuisine are similar to that of the rest of Spain.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Explanation. Trinidad and Tobago is an independent state in the southern Caribbean, lying only 11 km off Venezuela's coast. The country has around 1 million inhabitants and is made up by the bigger islands Trinidad and Tobago, and 21 smaller islands.The capital is called Port-of-Spain.The islands were discovered by Christopher Columbus in 1498.Trinidad and Tobago was a Spanish colony from around 1400 until the British arrived in 1797.rinidad and Tobago is an independent state in the southern Caribbean, lying only 11 km off Venezuela's coast. The country has around 1 million inhabitants and is made up by the bigger islands Trinidad and Tobago, and 21 smaller islands.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The Balearic island and the Canary Islands are the two major island groups in Spain. Balearic Islands lies on the Mediterranean Sea, where as the Canary Islands lie on the Atlantic Sea.Spain is surrounded by water bodies on all the four sides.he Balearic Island in Spain is known as the Mediterranean Paradise and is primarily divided into two parts, one in the north and the other in the south west. The northern part is known as Gimnesias, which comprises of Menorca.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean Sea, and the Canary Islands of the coast of Africa are part of Spain.These are two sets of islands and they are not owned by Spain … , they are part of Spain. 2 people found this useful.he Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean Sea, and the Canary Islands of the coast of Africa are part of Spain. These are two sets of islands and they are not owned by Spain … , they are part of Spain. 2 people found this useful.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The Caribbean is not a place that belongs to a country. It is a region which is located in the American continents...around the caribbean sea...near Mexico..it comprises of several island teritorries...the Bahamas included...Rostrum · 8 years ago. Thumbs up.he Caribbean is not a country it is an area. There are numerous islands in the area and each one belongs to a different country or is an independent country."
] |
The Balearic island and the Canary Island.
|
[
"Passage 2"
] |
how much does a jeep renegade key cost
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Those 3rd party keys do not always program, it is a crap shoot, when I was still working at the Chrysler dealer they where about 50/50 if they would program, you can get a not chipped key for about $5 from the dealer that will unlock everything but not start it.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: For the base model, the average paid price for a new 2017 Jeep Renegade is trending $5,745 below the manufacturer's MSRP. There are 10 available 2017 Jeep Renegade trim lines. The average savings for the 2017 Jeep Renegade Sport 4x4 is 27.24% below the MSRP. Our MSRP Includes the Destination Fee\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Note: dont believe a damned thing the locksmith says about only him (or the dealership) having to program your keys. He is LYING. Happened to me, but thankfully I did research before and called his bluff. My key cost a whopping $11 total to buy and have cut. (I am a miserably CHEAP SOB) ALWAYS have at least three working keys for your jeep.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: 2017 Jeep Renegade Price Trend. On August 15th, there were There are not enough sales transactions to display the Market Average trend for the the The average price paid for the 2017 Jeep Renegade. was is trending $574 below above at MSRP.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Originally Posted by Trendsetter75. Went to the dealership to ask how much a new key is they said $225.00. Is there any other options I can go about getting it cheaper or is this something I can only get at the Stealership.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: I just want a plain chipped key, one that can start the jeep and run with it without burning up the ignition. And open the doors of course! I have no buttons on my key. So, I have two working keys now and need one more working key for my wife. What do I do to get one cheaper than at the dealer? Mine has a chip inside it.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: How TrueCar Works. 1 1. See what others paid Tell us what you're looking for and we. share what your neighbors paid. 2 2. Real pricing on actual cars Browse inventory from the. comfort of your home. 3 3. Get competitive pricing Local dealers provide pricing on. vehicles that match your preferences.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Using this week's average price of $20,346, new car buyers can expect to pay as low as $367 a month with a 20% down payment of $4,069 on a new 2017 Jeep Renegade. This price is based on a 48 month average finance rate of 3.9%.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Jeep Key Expensive. Went to the dealership to ask how much a new key is they said $225.00. Is there any other options I can go about getting it cheaper or is this something I can only get at the Stealership.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: For the base model, the average paid price for a new 2017 Jeep Renegade is trending $3,569 below the manufacturer's MSRP. There are 10 available 2017 Jeep Renegade trim lines. The average savings for the 2017 Jeep Renegade Sport 4x4 is 14.92% below the MSRP."
] |
The average price of a Jeep Renegade is $20,346.
|
[
"Passage 8"
] |
nba average ticket price
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: If you paid average prices on the secondary market for tickets, it would cost a whopping grand total of $10,182 (($6,888 for four Warriors home games + $3,294 for three Sharks home games).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: In 2011-12 they were ranked 23rd in attendance with an average ticket price of $85, 2012-13 ranked 19th in attendance, 2013-14 ranked 9th in attendance with a $50.00 average ticket price to 2013-2014 ranked 1st in attendance with the Raptors tickets average price of $120 per ticket.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Already the third most in-demand ticket in the NBA in 2014-15 – with an average resale ticket price of $114 – Warriors home game tickets more than doubled in price to $265, an increase of 132 percent.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Single game tickets for the 2016-17 season are on sale now at Bulls.com, NBATickets.com, the United Center, Ticketmaster locations, or by calling 1-800-4NBA-TIX. NBATickets.com Marketplace: Buy tickets from Season Ticket Holders or sell your tickets. Ticket Partners: Join a season ticket group.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: However, despite the team’s average ticket price falling 44 percent from a 2014-2015 regular season price of $233, Cleveland’s 2015-2016 price of $131 was still the fourth highest in the league, behind only the Warriors, Lakers, and Knicks.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Just as the Golden State Warriors’ record setting 2015-2016 NBA regular season captivated millions worldwide, the team’s average home ticket price shot up to become the highest in the league.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Want to see NBA D-League action in person? Purchase tickets to an NBA D-League game! See below for ticket links for all 22 NBA D-League teams.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: NBA Average Ticket Prices. Cleveland has become the “IT” town! With the signing of King James, the average Cavaliers ticket price on the secondary market went from a low of $47 in 2012 to now being the highest average price on the secondary market with a $195 per ticket average in the 2014-15 NBA regular season.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The cheapest get-in price for a Stanley Cup game in San Jose, meanwhile, was $659 as of Tuesday, for Game 4 next Monday night. While average ticket prices for the NBA Finals—a repeat of last year's matchup—are sky high, seats can be had for well under $1,000. VividSeats.com, StubHub, and TiqIQ were showing ticket prices starting at $480, $535, and $576, respectively, for Game 1 in Oakland on Thursday.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: 2.) When to Buy NBA Tickets. During the NBA season, average NBA ticket prices (one month in advance of a game) are roughly $100 each. Generally, NBA ticket prices decrease gradually as game day approaches and 72 hours before the game tickets will have decreased in price by 30%. In the last 24 hours ticket prices will decrease (on average) by an additional 5%, or $5."
] |
$100.
|
[
"Passage 10"
] |
what's a gerund phrase?
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Here are five noun-uses of gerunds and infinitives (and one additional non-noun use, the adjective complement, that we throw in here, free of charge). Gerunds and infintives can both function as the subject of a sentence: Playing basketball takes up too much of her time.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Difference Between Gerund and Participle. In English language, there are instances when verbs are used as parts of speech. These verbs are then called verbals. There are three kinds of verbals called Gerunds, Participles, and Infinitives.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Examples of Gerund Phrases. The gerund, 'running,' is modified by the prepositional phrase 'from the law' to form a gerund phrase. The gerund, 'swimming,' is the direct object in the sentence and is the thing that I love. Therefore, it is acting like a noun. The prepositional phrase 'with my swim team' modifies the gerund to show how I am swimming and, thus, creates a gerund phrase. 'With my surf board, I love riding ocean waves.'.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Usually, however, when a noun or pronoun precedes a gerund, that noun or pronoun takes a possessive form. This is especially true of formal, academic writing. There are exceptions to this. When the noun preceding the gerund is modified by other words, use the common form of that noun, not the possessive.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Thus, gerund is a verbal noun and functions both as a verb as well as a noun. It is derived from a verb but functions as a noun. However, it has the characteristics of verb even while functioning as a noun which is why it is referred to as a verbal noun.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: 1 When the noun preceding the gerund is modified by other words, use the common form of that noun, not the possessive. 2 Federico was pleased by Carlos's making the Dean's List for the first time. Federico was pleased by Carlos, his oldest son, making the Dean's List for the first time.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Both gerunds and infinitives can be nouns, which means they can do just about anything that a noun can do. Although they name things, like other nouns, they normally name activities rather than people or objects.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: 1 When the noun preceding the gerund is modified by other words, use the common form of that noun, not the possessive. 2 Federico was pleased by Carlos's making the Dean's List for the first time. but. Federico was pleased by Carlos, his oldest son, making the Dean's List for the first time.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Don't mistake a present participle phrase for a gerund phrase. Gerund and present participle phrases are easy to confuse because they both begin with an ing word. The difference is the function that they provide in the sentence. A gerund phrase will always behave as a noun while a present participle phrase will act as an adjective. Walking on the beach, Delores dodged jellyfish that had washed ashore. Walking on the beach = present participle phrase describing the noun Delores. Walking on the beach is painful if jellyfish have washed ashore.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Gerund vs Participle. In English language, there are instances when verbs are used as parts of speech. These verbs are then called verbals. There are three kinds of verbals called Gerunds, Participles, and Infinitives. People remain confused between gerund and participle because of their similarities. Both are formed when ing is added to a verb."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what do kids need to know for math in fourth grade
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Fourth Grade Math Standards: What Students Should Know. 1 What K12 offers: 2 Online tutoring. 3 Has a strong and effective partnership with public and private schools. 4 AdvancED-accredited corporation meeting the highest standards of educational management.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: As a teacher, I love this program for my children. My two girls, ages 5 and 8, use Splash Math every day to practice math skills. As a teacher, I love that the program gives multiple practice of math skills across a variety of different skill sets, including graphs, addition, subtraction, and money...\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Kaplan Kids. 1 What Kaplan Kids offers: 2 Online tutoring. 3 Customized learning plans. 4 Real-Time Progress Reports track your child's progress.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: At the fourth grade level, your child will learn to convert fractions to decimals and to compare two decimals amounts up to the hundredths place. Measurement and Data. Your fourth grader should be able to recognize that an angle is formed by two rays that have a common endpoint.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: My daughter asks for Splash Math! We homeschool and our daughter was struggling with multiplication. Since using Splash Math for 4th grade, she can not only do multiplication problems quicker (she actually asks if she can do Splash Math), it has increased her confidence and has helped boost her division skills, too! Splash Math makes it fun to learn.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Fourth Grade Math Standards: What Students Should Know. The first step in helping your child with math is knowing where you should direct your attention. Each of the fourth grade focus areas are discussed below, so keep reading to find out exactly what to work on with your child.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: For example, your child will need to know that a kilogram is larger than a gram. Operations and Algebraic Thinking. At the fourth grade level, your student will use multiplication and division to solve multi-step word problems that contain whole numbers.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Other Articles You May Be Interested In. 1 MIND Games Lead to Math Gains Imagine a math teaching tool so effective that it need only be employed twice per week for less than an hour to result in huge proficiency gains.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Fourth Grade Math Standards: What Students Should Know The first step in helping your child with math is knowing where you should direct your attention. Each of the fourth grade focus areas are discussed below, so keep reading to find out exactly what to work on with your child.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: What Your Fourth Grader Should Know. Geometry. In fourth grade math, your child should be able to identify and draw points, rays, angles, lines and line segments. It is also important for your student to know the difference between parallel and perpendicular lines. Your child should also be familiar with each type of triangle, as well as lines of symmetry for a variety of 2-dimensional figures."
] |
In fourth grade math, your child should be able to identify and draw points, rays, angles, lines and line segments. It is also important for your student to know the difference between parallel and perpendicular lines. Your child should also be familiar with each type of triangle, as well as lines of symmetry for a variety of 2-dimensional figures.
|
[
"Passage 10"
] |
what river does not flow in the himalayas
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Lifted by the collision of the Indian tectonic plate with the Eurasian Plate, the Himalayan range runs northwest to southeast in a 2,400 kilometres (1,500 mi) long arc. The range varies in width from 400 kilometres (250 mi) in the west to 150 kilometres (93 mi) in the east.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: The Himalaya, roof of the world, is a magic place where the magnificence of the world's highest mountains is mirrored in the rugged beauty and unique culture of the people who live in their shadow.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The Gangotri Glacier, a vast expanse of ice five miles by fifteen, at the foothills of the Himalayas (14000 ft) in north Uttar Pradesh is the source of Bhagirathi, which joins with Alaknanda (origins nearby), to form Ganga at the craggy, canyon-carved town of Devprayag.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The Tapti is a river of central India. It is one of the major rivers of peninsular India with the lenth of around 724 km, and only the Tapti River along with the Narmada river, and the Mahi River run from east to west.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The holiest of all the rivers, Ganga or the Ganges is a perennial river, which is held in high regard by the Hindus. The Ganga river has an exalted position in the Hindu ethos.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The Ganga has an exalted position in the Hindu ethos. It is repeatedly invoked in the Vedas, the Puranas, and the two Indian epics, the Ramayana and the Mahabharata. Ganga is a goddess, Ganga devi, one of two daughters of Meru (the Himalayas), the other being Uma, consort of Shiva.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The Gandak, which comes from near Kathmandu, is another big Himalayan tributary. Other important rivers that merge with the Ganga are the Son, which originates in the hills of Madhya Pradesh, the Gomti which flows past Lucknow, and the Chambal made notorious by the ravines in its valley.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The Himalayas span five countries: India, Nepal, Bhutan, China (Tibet), and Pakistan, with the first three countries having sovereignty over most of the range.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Three of the world's major rivers—the Indus, the Ganges and the Brahmaputra —arise in the Himalayas. While the Indus and the Brahmaputra rise near Mount Kailash in Tibet, the Ganges rises in the Indian state of Uttarakhand. Their combined drainage basin is home to some 600 million people.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: The rivers of India play an important role in the lives of the Indian people. The river systems provide irrigation, potable water, cheap water transportation, electricity, as well as provide livelihoods for a large number of people all over the country."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
eczema ear
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Eczema on Ear. Eczema on the ear can be particularly uncomfortable because of the extreme itchiness it can cause and the likelihood of an infection developing when the skin is damaged. The ear also becomes more prone to invasion by bacteria or fungus.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Common Questions and Answers about Eczema in ear canal treatment. I use this after every time I shower and I have not had a break since until now. Recently medication used for my ear caused me to develop eczema in my ear. I was prescribed a medication but after my first experience I had little faith in it. I decided to try my own cure first. I have been taking a small piece of rolled tissue and dipping it into the Cetaphil lotion.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Eczema on the ear or in the ear can initially be caused by the skin being extra sensitive. Often the natural oil is stripped away through over cleaning or aggravated by getting water in the ear, wearing ear plugs, using cotton swabs or Q-tips or from the chemicals in shampoos, soaps and even hair spray.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Allergy/Eczema in Ears leaking clear fluid. melamommy. I've had eczema in my ears for 15 yrs. It is very cyclical, starting w/intense uncontrollable itching, then clear fluid leaking from skin, followed by crusting over & flaking of skin in ears that is itchy in & of itself, leading to more scratching & picking at ears. The skin in my ears gets very damaged and ratty during outbreaks.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Saw another GP yesterday who said I had eczema in my ears and prescribed ear drops, olive oil and cortisone cream. So, now this is a new thing for me as I might not have a hearing problem at all. I have written down all the suggestions, especially the coconut oil one as I too have had many years of stomach problems.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: A natural zinc cream is another method to give a cooling sensation to the eczema affected area of the ear. Again, there are antibacterial properties in zinc. Use throughout the day to combat itchiness, keep the ear bacteria-free and moisturize too.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: I have had severe itching, and leakage in my ears for 30 years. I went to ENT and he diagnosed eczema in the ears. I was relieved there was a name for this, thought I was the only one in the world with itchy ears.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Otitis externa can usually be treated effectively with ear drops prescribed by your GP and some simple self-care techniques. In most cases, your symptoms will start to improve within a few days of starting treatment.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The last diagnosis is that her eardrum is fine, but there is ear eczema present. The treatment is Erythromycin ointment, along with Triamcinolone cream, and 500 m.g. of Penicillin VK four times a day.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Eczema on the ear can also occur in the skin folds behind the ear, particularly in young children. Again, natural remedies can be used successfully. The pictures shows the patient pull the ears forward, exposing the crease of the ear where eczema is present."
] |
It is caused by the skin being extra sensitive.
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 1"
] |
how much foreign debt does the us own
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: WASHINGTON – Preliminary data from an annual survey of U.S. portfolio holdings of foreign securities at year-end 2010 were released today and posted on the Treasury web site at link. Final survey results, which will include additional detail as well as revisions to the data, will be reported on October 31, 2011.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: And the safest option in the present day world is the bonds issued by the US Treasury. In the process, China ends up accumulating 1.2 trillion dollars worth US Debt, becoming the largest foreign creditor to the US. In other words, China is financing the Current Account Deficit of the US. This is what China holding US debt means.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: US Economy. The U.S. debt is $19 trillion. Most headlines focus on how much the United States owes China, which is one of the largest foreign owners. What many people don’t know is that the Social Security Trust Fund, aka your retirement money, owns most of the national debt.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: According to the U.S. Treasury Department, at the end of August 2014, more than a third of the debt was owned by foreign countries (34.4%). The largest foreign holders of U.S. debt were Mainland China (7.2%) and Japan (7.0%).\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: US federal deficit: how much does China own of America's debt? The US Federal Deficit is an indicator of America's reliance on China. Find out which countries are propping up the US economy. • Get the latest data. America's federal deficit up and China owns lots of it. The US Federal Deficit is always in the news - and when Chinese premier Hu Jintao arrives to a lavish reception at the White House, he comes as bigger lender to the developing world than the World Bank.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The survey measured the value of U.S. holdings of foreign securities at year-end 2010 of approximately $6.8 trillion, with $4.6 trillion held in foreign equities, $1.7 trillion in foreign long-term debt securities (original term-to-maturity in excess of one year), and $0.4 trillion held in foreign short-term debt securities.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The US has a gross foreign debt of $18.4 trillion and a net foreign debt of over $3 trillion for 2010. The US has a gross foreign debt of $18.4 trillion and a net foreign debt of over $3 trillion for 2010, where net foreign debt is defined as the country’s borrowings from the rest of the world, less the country’s lending to the rest of the world. The US has lent the world $15.3 trillion in the years when it was the sole economic superpower.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Updated April 17, 2017. The U.S. debt is $19 trillion. Most headlines focus on how much the United States owes China, which is one of the largest foreign owners. What many people don’t know is that the Social Security Trust Fund, aka your retirement money, owns most of the national debt.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The previous such survey, conducted as of year-end 2009, measured the value of U.S. holdings of $6.0 trillion, with $4.0 trillion held in foreign equities, $1.6 trillion in foreign long-term debt securities, and $0.4 trillion held in foreign short-term debt securities.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: That is the subject of this article in which we’ll reveal who owns the most U.S. debt and how much of it is owned by foreign nations. We’ll begin by explaining, in simple terms, how the debt market functions. Debt 101. An individual takes on debt when they finance a new car, house, etc."
] |
Gross foreign debt of $18.4 trillion and a net foreign debt of over $3 trillion.
|
[
"Passage 7",
"Passage 8"
] |
difference between scott curl and preacher curl
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: However, I developed tendonitis in my right forearm doing EZ bar curls (both preacher and standing) as well as spider curls. All motions similar to that of the dumbbell curl. Hammer curls apparently do not stress that tendon (if your right hand is on the computer mouse it faces to the right, goes along the bone).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: One of the best bicep isolation exercises that you can do is the Preacher Curl. However, most people do this exercise WRONG…. But I’m not pointing fingers at anyone, because up until very recently I was one of those people who screwed up and made a critical mistake when doing preacher curls.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Although the simple action of the curl remains as basic as it gets, the biceps still possesses a full list of exercises to choose from. Standing barbell, preacher, dumbbell, incline and concentration are just a very few of the seemingly endless possibilities.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Stuart McRobert discusses the pros and cons of preacher curls. The popularity of the preacher curl owes much to Larry Scott. He was the first Mr. Olympia — in 1965 and again in ’66. He retired from competition after that, although he made a brief comeback in ’79. Scott used the preacher curl heavily in his prime and promoted it in his writings for many years following his retirement.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Stuart McRobert discusses the pros and cons of preacher curls. History. The popularity of the preacher curl owes much to Larry Scott. He was the first Mr. Olympia — in 1965 and again in ’66. He retired from competition after that, although he made a brief comeback in ’79.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Dumbbell Preacher Curl. This exercise when perform correctly has the same movement as the concentration curl. The main difference between the two exercises is the concentration curl your upper arm is resting on inside of your leg the preacher curl on the pad. With both exercises you are unable to use your body to help with the lift.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Cons: When not using correct form, the preacher curl can be a very dangerous exercise. Using too much weight can have a severely negative effect on biceps tendon and shoulder joint strain. Heaving up too much weight will do very little in the way of bigger biceps.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: As the big bruiser, the barbell curl packs on the mass and strength building the bulk of muscle. Conversely, the preacher curl can give you a better contraction and connection for an improved range of motion and a lesson in slow and controlled movement.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The brachialis lies underneath the bicep brachii, so it pushes the bicep brachii out and makes your upper arms appear bigger. Hammer curls also work the brachioradialis (which is different from the brachialis), and this is the forearm muscle that's kind of near your elbow ish. 1 permalink. 2 embed. 3 save. parent. give gold.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Muscle Differences. The different hand positions between the hammer curl and preacher curl exercises are what change the muscle focus. The palms-up position in the preacher curl causes your biceps brachii and brachialis muscles to contract. The biceps is the largest muscle in the front of your upper arm."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
which systems are needed for cell energy
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Consumer Energy Center-Fuel Cells For Electricity. Fuel cell technology is space-age technology brought down to earth. Fuel cell technology dates back to the 1800s, but it was not until the end of the 20th century that it was used successfully in spacecraft to provide electricity and water.uel cell technology is space-age technology brought down to earth. Fuel cell technology dates back to the 1800s, but it was not until the end of the 20th century that it was used successfully in spacecraft to provide electricity and water.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: A fuel cell is a device that converts the chemical energy from a fuel into electricity through a chemical reaction of positively charged hydrogen ions with oxygen or another oxidizing agent.n the case of fuel cells, useful output energy is measured in electrical energy produced by the system. Input energy is the energy stored in the fuel. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, fuel cells are generally between 40–60% energy efficient. This is higher than some other systems for energy generation.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Energy is required for all kinds of bodily processes including growth and development, repair, the transport of various substances between cells and of course, muscle contraction. It is this last area that Exercise Scientists are most interested in when they talk about energy systems.ioenergetics... or the study of energy flow through living systems is usually one of the first chapters in any good exercise physiology text. But the current model of human energy systems is being challenged... Recent research and practical experience expose its limitations, in particular with regard to fatigue.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: KEY ENERGY PROCESSES IN CELLS. Most of what a cell does involves endergonic reactions, requiring constant energy input; these reactions are coupled to just a few exergonic reactions which supply that energy. The key fuel source in cell reactions is Adenosine Triphosphate, or ATP.ight and sugars may be the ultimate sources of energy in cells, but mobilizing those energies is too complex to do everywhere a cell needs it. ATP is functional, easily put to use in many circumstances, whether its pure chemistry, generation of cell movement, active transport, or any process requiring energy input.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Light and sugars may be the ultimate sources of energy in cells, but mobilizing those energies is too complex to do everywhere a cell needs it. ATP is functional, easily put to use in many circumstances, whether its pure chemistry, generation of cell movement, active transport, or any process requiring energy input.A related molecule, guanosine triphosphate or GTP, is also used in several systems.ight and sugars may be the ultimate sources of energy in cells, but mobilizing those energies is too complex to do everywhere a cell needs it. ATP is functional, easily put to use in many circumstances, whether its pure chemistry, generation of cell movement, active transport, or any process requiring energy input.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: In fact, the Sun is the ultimate source of energy for almost all cells, because photosynthetic prokaryotes, algae, and plant cells harness solar energy and use it to make the complex organic food molecules that other cells rely on for the energy required to sustain growth, metabolism, and reproduction (Figure 1).igure 2: Cells can incorporate nutrients by phagocytosis. This amoeba, a single-celled organism, acquires energy by engulfing nutrients in the form of a yeast cell (red). Through a process called phagocytosis, the amoeba encloses the yeast cell with its membrane and draws it inside.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Adenosine 5'-triphosphate, or ATP, is the most abundant energy carrier molecule in cells. This molecule is made of a nitrogen base (adenine), a ribose sugar, and three phosphate groups. The word adenosine refers to the adenine plus the ribose sugar.igure 2: Cells can incorporate nutrients by phagocytosis. This amoeba, a single-celled organism, acquires energy by engulfing nutrients in the form of a yeast cell (red). Through a process called phagocytosis, the amoeba encloses the yeast cell with its membrane and draws it inside.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Complex organic food molecules such as sugars, fats, and proteins are rich sources of energy for cells because much of the energy used to form these molecules is literally stored within the chemical bonds that hold them together.igure 2: Cells can incorporate nutrients by phagocytosis. This amoeba, a single-celled organism, acquires energy by engulfing nutrients in the form of a yeast cell (red). Through a process called phagocytosis, the amoeba encloses the yeast cell with its membrane and draws it inside.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: A fuel cell uses the chemical energy of hydrogen or another fuel to cleanly and efficiently produce electricity. If hydrogen is the fuel, electricity, water, and heat are the only products. fuel cell uses the chemical energy of hydrogen or another fuel to cleanly and efficiently produce electricity. If hydrogen is the fuel, electricity, water, and heat are the only products.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: In addition to electricity, fuel cells produce water, heat and, depending on the fuel source, very small amounts of nitrogen dioxide and other emissions. The energy efficiency of a fuel cell is generally between 40–60%, or up to 85% efficient in cogeneration if waste heat is captured for use.n the case of fuel cells, useful output energy is measured in electrical energy produced by the system. Input energy is the energy stored in the fuel. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, fuel cells are generally between 40–60% energy efficient. This is higher than some other systems for energy generation."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what is a truck range extender
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The single most important thing you can do to extend the range of your 802.11 system is to install an external antenna with some good gain and directional or omni-directional qualities. WiFi is simply a radio, which is used for computer. You can think of your antenna as the “speaker system” of your WiFi card.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Over eight million hybrid cars will be made in 2025, each with a range extender, the additional power source that distinguishes them from pure electric cars.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Over eight million hybrid cars will be made in 2025 - each with a range extender. Order now Add to Subscription. Show All Description Contents, Tables & Figures List Order Information. We are in the decade of the hybrid electric vehicle despite the fact that most off road and underwater vehicles are pure electric.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The DAP-1520 Wireless AC750 Dual-Band Range Extender is a portable plug-in wireless repeater that lets you extend an existing wireless network. You can place it anywhere in your home to increase the range of your wireless network.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Range Extender. Plug Power is developing fuel cell range extenders to use with an emerging class of electric delivery vehicles. These electric vehicles can only travel a specific distance on one charge, on average, approximately 80 miles.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Over eight million hybrid cars will be made in 2025, each with a range extender, the additional power source that distinguishes them from pure electric cars. Add to that significant money spent on the same devices in buses, military vehicles, boats and so on and a major new market emerges.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Plug Power is developing fuel cell range extenders to use with an emerging class of electric delivery vehicles. These electric vehicles can only travel a specific distance on one charge, on average, approximately 80 miles.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: VIA’s trucks and vans drive up to 40-45 miles on batteries then continue up to 350 miles or more with the van, and 400 miles or more with the truck. It generates its own electricity using a fuel-efficient onboard generator or “range extender.”.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Range Extender. Plug Power is developing fuel cell range extenders to use with an emerging class of electric delivery vehicles. These electric vehicles can only travel a specific distance on one charge, on average, approximately 80 miles. By adding a hydrogen fuel cell, that range can more than double.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Plug Power is developing fuel cell range extenders to use with an emerging class of electric delivery vehicles. These electric vehicles can only travel a specific distance on one charge, on average, approximately 80 miles. By adding a hydrogen fuel cell, that range can more than double."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
purpose of prostate
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The function of the prostate is to store and secrete a slightly alkaline fluid, milky or white in appearance, that usually constitutes 25-30% of the volume of the semen along … with spermatozoa and seminal vesicle fluid.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: 1. Gland: About a third of your semen comes from your prostate. That means that the primary prostate gland function is producing and secreting some of the alkaline fluid that you ejaculate. The fact that this secretion is alkaline helps the sperm survive in the acidic vaginal environment.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Facts about the prostate gland. The prostate gland is about the size of a walnut. It's located just below the bladder and it surrounds the urethra (a tube that carries urine and semen out of the body). The prostate is partly muscular and partly glandular, with ducts opening into the prostatic portion of the urethra.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: As part of the male reproductive system, the prostate gland’s main purpose is to secrete a slightly alkaline fluid that forms part of the seminal fluid, a fluid that carries sperm.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The prostate is a walnut-sized gland located between the bladder and the penis. The prostate is just in front of the rectum. The urethra runs through the center of the prostate, from the bladder to the penis, letting urine flow out of the body.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The function of the prostate is to store and secrete a slightly alkaline fluid, milky or white in appearance, that usually constitutes 25-30% of the volume of the semen along … with spermatozoa and seminal vesicle fluid.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The main function of the prostate gland is to store and produce seminal fluid. Seminal fluid is a milky liquid that nourishes sperm. is to secrete proteins and hormones that are added to the ejaculatory fluid produced by the seminal vesicles.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: The prostate is a small gland in men that is part of the reproductive system. It's about the shape and size of a walnut. The prostate rests below the bladder and in front of the rectum. It surrounds part of the urethra, the tube that carries urine from the bladder.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The prostate gland is about the size of a walnut. It's located just below the bladder and it surrounds the urethra (a tube that carries urine and semen out of the body). The prostate is partly muscular and partly glandular, with ducts opening into the prostatic portion of the urethra.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Side View of the Prostate. The prostate is a walnut-sized gland located between the bladder and the penis. The prostate is just in front of the rectum. The urethra runs through the center of the prostate, from the bladder to the penis, letting urine flow out of the body."
] |
To secrete a slightly alkaline fluid that forms part of the seminal fluid.
|
[
"Passage 4"
] |
temperature in juarez mexico
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Ads help us bring you the weather for free. We want to be able to continue building great weather products for everyone. For less than a dollar a month ($10/yr) you can sign up for a premium membership and remove ads.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: This WeatherCity Weather Forecast for Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico is computed using a computer-generated forecast model and should be considered experimental.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: The Ciudad Juarez climate guide is perfect for planning your holiday. Monthly weather statistics give the best indication of what the weather is usually like for every month of the year including figures for temperature, rainfall and sunshine. 1 Temperature in Ciudad Juarez. Rainfall in Ciudad Juarez.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Weather in Ciudad Juarez in October. The average maximum daytime temperature in Ciudad Juarez in October is a warm 26°C (79°F) with low heat & humidity. There are usually 10 hours of bright sunshine each day, which represents 84% of the 11 hours of daylight.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Monthly weather statistics give the best indication of what the weather is usually like for every month of the year including figures for temperature, rainfall and sunshine. 1 Temperature in Ciudad Juarez. 2 Rainfall in Ciudad Juarez. Sunshine in Ciudad Juarez.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Weather in Ciudad Juarez in October 2016. Check the weather in Ciudad Juarez in October before you book your next holiday in Mexico. Long-term weather averages give the best indication of the weather in October 2016 and include figures for temperature, sunshine and rainfall for Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Partial cloudiness early, with scattered showers and thunderstorms during the afternoon. High near 95F. Winds SSW at 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain 40%.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Monthly weather statistics give the best indication of what the weather is usually like for every month of the year including figures for temperature, rainfall and sunshine. 1 Temperature in Ciudad Juarez. 2 Rainfall in Ciudad Juarez. 3 Sunshine in Ciudad Juarez. More climate in Ciudad Juarez.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: The Ciudad Juarez climate guide is perfect for planning your holiday. Monthly weather statistics give the best indication of what the weather is usually like for every month of the year including figures for temperature, rainfall and sunshine. Temperature in Ciudad Juarez.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Ciudad Juarez climate by month. Check Ciudad Juarez climate for a particular month by selecting from the list below. Monthly climate guides include figures for temperature, rainfall, sunshine hours and sea temperature plus daily sunrise & sunset times."
] |
In October is a warm 26°C or 79°F with low heat & humidity.
|
[
"Passage 4"
] |
what is the magnification of the eyepiece
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: As you get to 50x or 60x per inch of aperture, some faint extended deep space objects can become too dim to see. Thus, while an 8 telescope is theoretically capable of a maximum useful deep space power of 480x (60 x 8) , that much power is often usable only for splitting close binary stars.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Magnification. Magnification is the ability of a telescope to make a small, distant object large enough to examine in detail. If you look at the Moon (250,000 miles away) with a 125 power (125x) telescope, it's essentially the same as looking at it with your bare eyes from 2000 miles away (250,000 ÷ 125 = 2000).\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: This gives you a highest useful power of about 200x to 240x with an 8 scope on an average night, 100x to 120x with a 4 scope, etc.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: For example, consider a 10 mm-focal-length eyepiece of 50° apparent field in combination with a scope of 1,000 mm focal length. The magnification will be 100x (that is, 1,000/10) and the true field will be 50°/100x, or 0.5° — so the full Moon would just nestle within the field of view.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: The magnification of a telescope is determined by dividing the focal length of the telescope (usually in millimeters) by the focal length of the eyepiece used (again, usually in millimeters; but in all cases by the same unit of measurement used for the telescope focal length).\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: The largest-focal-length eyepiece you can use with your telescope is easy to calculate: multiply the focal ratio (the focal length of your scope divided by its aperture) by 7. For example, your Newtonian scope is f/5: the largest-focal-length eyepiece you should use is 35 mm.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: There is one specification that is very important when you are considering an alternative eyepiece for your telescope — its physical size. The vast majority available today have chromed barrels with a diameter of 1¼ inches (31.7 millimeters), that slide into the push-fit focusers of most telescopes.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Highest useful magnification. Highest useful magnification: Any telescope is theoretically capable of unlimited magnification. As power increases,however, image brightness on extended objects (nebulas, galaxies) decreases, as you’ll see in the section on exit pupils.. Point sources (stars), on the other hand, do not become dimmer.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: For example, a 2000mm focal length telescope and a 10mm focal length eyepiece will give you a magnification of 200 power (2000 ÷ 10 = 200). The same 2000mm telescope with a 20mm eyepiece will give you 100x (2000 ÷ 20 = 100). Wishlist Register Login.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Eyepieces have focal lengths, too — 25- or 10-mm, for example. To calculate the magnification, simply divide the focal length of the scope by that of the eyepiece. A 2000-mm focal length scope used with a 25-mm eyepiece will therefore deliver 2000/25 = 80 power (or 80x)."
] |
100x
|
[
"Passage 4",
"Passage 10"
] |
where is oak park, ca
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Below you will find the 2017 Street Sweeping schedule for Oak Park. In an effort to keep our community clean, Oak Park Now wants to encourage all residents that host garage sales to remove the signs they distribute throughout the community upon completion of the sale. On any given weekend, garage sale signs are left lingering across the community without proper removal.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: OAK PARK NEWS & EVENTS... NOW! Oak Park Now is proud to offer up to the minute information about the community of Oak Park, located in Ventura County, California. Oak Park is a very special community admired by many, near and far.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: All Activities. © 2016 • Rancho Simi Recreation & Park District • 1692 Sycamore Dr., Simi Valley, CA 93065 • 805-584-4400, To submit a Comment or Suggestion, please click here. Powered By Revize Login.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: List Map. Coldwell Banker Residential Brokerage can help you find Oak Park, CA homes for sale and condos. Refine your Oak Park real estate search results by price, property type, bedrooms, baths and other features.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Use Zillow to find your next perfect rental in Oak Park. You can even find Oak Park luxury apartments or a rental for you and your pet. If you need some help deciding how much to spend on your next apartment or house, our rent affordability calculator can show you rentals that may fit your budget in Oak Park.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Oak Park, CA. Sponsored Topics. Oak Park is a census-designated place located in the Simi Hills, in Ventura County, California. As of the 2010 census, Oak Park had a population of 14,266, up from 14,225 at the 2000 census. It is located in the Conejo Valley, north from Malibu and Agoura Hills and is a part of Ventura County.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: You can filter Oak Park rentals by price, bedroom size, square footage and more. You can also check our rental listings in Oak Park on the go by downloading Zillow's mobile app for rentals. Don't let the perfect apartment, townhouse or house for rent in Oak Park get away.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Buy your Oak Park-Opoly Game Board The Oak Park Community is celebrating its 50th Anniversary! To mark this auspicious event, the OPUSD Community Outreach Committee is producing our own Oak Park-Opoly Game Board. Sale Price is $40.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Big Sunday in Oak Park - MAY 7 May 7, 2017 - 8:30 a.m. to noon Please join OPUSD's Community Outreach Committee in a 'Day of Giving to our Oak Park schools and community.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Recent posts about Oak Park, California on our local forum with over 2,000,000 registered users. Oak Park is mentioned 278 times on our forum: Latest news from Oak Park, CA collected exclusively by city-data.com from local newspapers, TV, and radio stations. Ancestries: Italian (8.9%), German (6.2%), American (5.4%), Irish (4.8%), English (4.7%), European (4.7%)."
] |
In the Simi Hills, in Ventura County, California.
|
[
"Passage 6"
] |
what state produces the most apples
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Rating Newest Oldest. Best Answer: The United States has approximately 7,500 apple producers that grow nearly 100 varieties of apples in 36 states. The top six apple-producing states are Washington, New York, Michigan, Pennsylvania, California and Virginia. The largest U.S. apple crop on record, of 277.3 million cartons, was harvested in 1998. The United States is the world's second-largest producer of apples, behind the People's Republic of China. Turkey, Italy, Germany and Italy complete the list of the world's top apple-producing countries.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Apples are the the second most valuable fruit crop in the U.S. and they are harvested in the fall. Although they are not native to the U.S. they can grow in most of the 50 sta … tes, but are mostly found in Washington State, New York and Michigan.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Apples can be grown in all states but, some states grow more Apples than others. The top Apple producing states in the US are Washington state, New York, Pennsylvania, Massach … usetts, and Connecticut. 13 people found this useful. 1 Europe on a Budget: 21 Free Walking Tours in Europe Walking tours can be a great way to get to know a new city.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: 5 people found this useful. Edit. Share to: 1 Health Benefits of Apples That old saying, An apple a day keeps the doctor away, was first printed in 'Notes and Queries' magazine-in slightly different form-way back in February 1866 in Wales.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: 1 Apple trees take four to five years to produce their first fruit. 2 Most apples are still picked by hand in the fall. 3 Apple varieties range in size from a little larger than a cherry to as large as a grapefruit. 4 Apples are propagated by two methods: grafting or budding.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: 1 The top apple producing states are Washington, New York, Michigan,Pennsylvania, California and Virginia. 2 In 2006, 58% of apples produced in the United States were produced in Washington, 11% in New York, 8% in Michigan, 5% in Pennsylvania, 4% in California and 2% in Virginia.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: 1 The Arkansas State Flower The state flower of Arkansas is the delicately beautiful apple blossom. 2 Arkansas is one of the Southern states of America, bordered by Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Miss….\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Share to: what's the top apple-producing state in the U.S Washington State is by far the largest apple producing state. They account for about half of the U.S production, … followed by New York, Michigan, and California as distant 2nd, 3rd, and 4ths. + 33 others found this useful. Mark Harper.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: 1 In 2006, 58% of apples produced in the United States were produced in Washington, 11% in New York, 8% in Michigan, 5% in Pennsylvania, 4% in California and 2% in Virginia. 2 In 2005, there were 7,500 apple growers with orchards covering 379,000 acres.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: 1 Health Benefits of Apples That old saying, An apple a day keeps the doctor away, was first printed in 'Notes and Queries' magazine-in slightly different form-way back in February 1866 in Wales. …. 2 Popular Online MBA Programs A Master's in Business Administration is a highly sought after degree."
] |
Washington
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 2"
] |
can lobsters breathe outside of water
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Answer by Gus28 (683). The gills of crayfish can take water out of the air if in a moist environment and can live a couple days out of water under those conditions.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: One of the most common reasons crabs such as the hermit crab dies in captivity is because crab owners neglect to provide them with this. The difference between marine crabs and land hermit crabs is that land hermit crabs have much smaller gills but also need air to breathe.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Answer by 01628773 (140). Crayfish are different from many other aquatic species in that they remove oxygen from air or water using specialized gill chambers. As a result, they can survive for six to seven months out of the water if in a humid environment.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Crabs are somewhat similar to fish in that they are equipped with gills for breathing. The gills themselves are feathery type structures located at the top of the crab’s walking legs. They are derived from part of the jointed walking leg. In order to breathe on land, crabs must keep these gills moist so that oxygen in the air can still be absorbed. Gills work because oxygen is a very small molecule.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Lobsters are invertebrates with a very primitive nervous system similar to that of a grasshopper. A lobster’s nervous system is lower on the evolutionary scale than that of fish, and is designed to respond to very basic stimuli contained within their habitat.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Answer by ferfer72 (2623). Crayfish can live for 5-7 days out of water. If you find them out, leave them in very shallow water for 24 hours before returning them to the tank. add a comment.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: This species of lobster has a large crusher and a pincher claw. The rock lobster, also known as a spiny lobster, has no large claws and is found in many other parts of the world including Europe, Australia and the Caribbean. Spiny lobsters are more often found in warm water habitats than the American lobster.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Crabs such as the hermit crab use their claws and antennae to keep themselves moist by placing water onto themselves. Because these creatures need to keep their gills moist to breathe properly, it is important that a water source of some kind always be nearby.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: A lobster would use these reserves when it is in storage. Lobsters are naturally adapted to going without food for long periods of time. During the winter, when water temperatures are cold (below 39 o F or 4 C), lobsters go into a state similar to hibernation and stop feeding.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: A. Blue lobsters are caused by genetic differences in the pigments that make up the shell color. Rather than containing all the pigments that combine to make a green-brown color, the shell of a blue lobster is contains only a blue pigment."
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
iboard auto phone number
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Select Your Product from the Following List to Contact Us by Phone, Web or Mail:\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Get USAA Auto and Property Insurance contact information, including phone numbers, addresses and hours of operation, for claims, policy service, auto glass repair, roadside assistance, sticker requests and more.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: 6 iBoard Running Boards Installed on a 2011 Chevy Silverado Crew Cab - Duration: 26:01. paisteboy 25,855 views\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Fill out the form: 1 Reporting Suspicious Email Messages. 2 Reporting Security Vulnerabilities. 3 Use the Become a Progressive Agent form to inquire about becoming an agent or broker. 4 Use the Contact Investor Relations form to send an email.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: General Customer Service General Customer Service: 1-877-383-4802 For faster customer service, please use the links above to contact the appropriate customer service center for your specific needs. Find a Branch/ATM Branch/ATM Locator\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Auto Glass Repair and Replacement; Phone Number: 888-452-7754: Hours of Operation: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Property. 1 homeowners claim status (existing claim) 2 file a homeowners claim (new claim) 3 boat insurance (new or existing claim) 4 flood claim (new or existing claim) 5 personal property claim (new or existing claim) 6 windstorm insurance claim (new or existing claim)\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Phone Number: #USAA (or # 8722) Call our shortcut number Shortcut Number (Opens Pop-up Layer) to reach us from a mobile phone 210-531-USAA (or 210-531-8722) Phone Menu Tips for Auto and Property Insurance Claims(Opens Pop-up Layer) 800-531-USAA (or 800-531-8722) Phone Menu Tips for Auto and Property Insurance Claims(Opens Pop-up Layer)\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: 2016 Ram 1500 Crew cab IBOARD Running Boards how to install and Fix - Duration: 2:27. Tom Shelton 31,951 views\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: General Customer Service. General Customer Service: 1-877-383-4802 For faster customer service, please use the links above to contact the appropriate customer service center for your specific needs. Find a Branch/ATM"
] |
No Answer Present.
|
[] |
what is a watercolor
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: Watercolor painting is an art form that creates artistic representations, usually on paper, using pigments that are water-soluble. Other forms of painting use oil soluble paints or dry pigment in sticks such as pastels.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: First, it means a pigment that, when mixed with water as a medium, creates a type of paint. Watercolor paint is transparent, and the white of the ground (paper) underneath provides light that shines through the painting. Second, a watercolor is what we call a painting created with watercolors.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Simply put, watercolor is a painting compound using water-soluble pigments that are either transparent or opaque. Because of the medium itself as well as the paper to which it is applied, watercolor is frequently thought of as a fugitive medium.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: Watercolor painting employs a variety of different techniques specific to the medium. The most characteristic is perhaps the technique known as wet-in-wet, in which large portions of the paper are wet, either with an earlier application of a wash of color or with plain uncolored water.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: Watercolor paint is transparent, and the white of the ground (paper) underneath provides light that shines through the painting. Second, a watercolor is what we call a painting created with watercolors. Finally, watercolor can also be used as a verb. To watercolor describes painting with watercolors.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: A brief look at this luminous fine art medium. Simply put, watercolor is a painting compound using water-soluble pigments that are either transparent or opaque. Because of the medium itself as well as the paper to which it is applied, watercolor is frequently thought of as a fugitive medium.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Full Definition of WATERCOLOR. 1. : a paint of which the liquid is a water dispersion of the binding material (as glue, casein, or gum). 2. : the art or method of painting with watercolors. 3. : a picture or design executed in watercolors.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: Full Definition of WATERCOLOR. 1. : a paint of which the liquid is a water dispersion of the binding material (as glue, casein, or gum). 2. : the art or method of painting with watercolors. 3. : a picture or design executed in watercolors. — watercolor adjective. — wa·ter·col·or·ist \\-ˌkə-lə-rist\\ noun.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Watercolor (American English) or watercolour (Commonwealth and Ireland), also aquarelle (French loanword), a diminutive of the Latin for water, is a painting method in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water-based solution. Watercolor refers to both the medium and the resulting artwork.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Definition: (noun) - Watercolor has several meanings. First, it means a pigment that, when mixed with water as a medium, creates a type of paint. Watercolor paint is transparent, and the white of the ground (paper) underneath provides light that shines through the painting."
] |
A paint of which the liquid is a water dispersion of the binding material (as glue, casein, or gum).
|
[
"Passage 3",
"Passage 7"
] |
is there a difference between use by date and expiration date
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: There is one caveat: if you've opened the product already. Once you do that, things become a little less precise because the food is at risk of being contaminated by your or the environment, something the date on the packaging doesn't account for.\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: Expiration date: Do not use/eat on or after that date. Best if used/eaten by date: Better if used/eaten before that date. Almost the same but when something expires you can't use/eat it.If it just passed the best if used/eaten by date it's ok to use/eat but it's better not to. santhosh s · 7 years ago.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: Best Answer: there is a difference.. best before date--length of time which an item is suitable for sale. it is the recommended time which a product will remain good. this date is more of a guideline and it gives the recommended date by which the product is best consumed by.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: What is the difference between a sell by date and an expiration date for food? The semantic difference is clear, but why do some foods have one and not the other? Answer Wiki. I think expiration dates is actually the broader name for a category of food labeling at least in the US. The USDA seems to provide guidelines in labeling consistent with what consumer groups say about them: http://www.fsis.usda.gov/factshe... Written May 10, 2011.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: I think expiration dates is actually the broader name for a category of food labeling at least in the US. http://www.fsis.usda.gov/factshe...\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: Sell-By Date: Refers to the last day a retailer can display a product for sale; typically a food is safe to eat for 10 days after the Sell-by Date if refrigerated properly. Use-By Date: Refers to the last day a product will maintain its optimum freshness, flavor, and texture. Beyond this date, the product begins to deteriorate although it is still edible. Expiration Date: Means what it says - if you haven't used a product by this date, toss it. Zuckerbrot pointed out a surprising fact: with the exception of baby food and infant formula, dating is not required by U.S. federal law.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: Finally, a Definitive Breakdown of Use-By, Sell-By, and Best-By Dates. You’re probably tossing most of the things in your kitchen way too early.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: You Almost Definitely Toss Your Products Too Early. Unless a use-by or best-by label is followed by the words for safety, these dates refer to the quality of your products—so there's no need to panic if you're a few days past the use-by date. You can probably eat it and not worry about it, just understand it's not the best quality anymore, says Brackett.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: Difference between Sell-By, Use-By and Expiration Dates. **This is essential information to know for your Emergency Food Storage. Decoding food expiration dates. Dietitian discusses difference between Sell-By, Use-By and Expiration Dates; Also, foods you can keep longer than label says.\nTitle: Passage 10\\Content: Difference between Expiration Date and Best Before Date? What is the difference between Expiration Date and Best Before Date. you can find such things in common eatable things. Update: ok, Best Before Date is the date up to which the product tastes good."
] |
Yes, because Use-By Date Refers to the last day a product will maintain its optimum freshness, flavor, and texture and Expiration Date: Means what it says - if you haven't used a product by this date, toss it.
|
[
"Passage 6"
] |
nfl preseason tv schedule
|
[
"Title: Passage 1\\Content: The NFL on Monday released its full preseason schedule for the 2017 season. The release of the NFL's 2017 regular-season schedule is expected to come next week. No, NFL preseason games do not matter. And yes, many have issues with the league's preseason format (and ticket pricing).\nTitle: Passage 2\\Content: NFL preseason national TV schedule: Football returns with the Hall of Fame Game. Green Bay Packers running back Eddie Lacy carries the ball during a training-camp scrimmage on July 31, 2016, in Green Bay, Wis.\nTitle: Passage 3\\Content: 2016 NFL Preseason national TV schedule announced; most games will air after the Olympics. The NFL has announced its preseason schedule for August and early September and there are a few quirks this year as compared to other preseasons. Due to the Olympics, the NFL is backloading its national television schedule. CBS, Fox and NBC will air their games over a four-day span between August 25 and 28. As all of the NFL’s TV partners air two preseason games each, the broadcast networks will take care of their commitments during that time frame.\nTitle: Passage 4\\Content: The rest of the nationally televised preseason schedule includes. 1 New Orleans Saints at New England Patriots, 6:30 p.m. Aug. 11 on NFL Network. 2 Detroit Lions at Pittsburgh Steelers, 6 p.m. Aug. 12 on NFL Network. 3 Oakland Raiders at Arizona Cardinals, 9 p.m. Aug. 12 on NFL Network.\nTitle: Passage 5\\Content: NFL Preseason Schedule 2016: Dates, Times, TV Coverage and Live Stream Info. The good news: The NFL is back. The bad news: The NFL regular season doesn't start for another month. Even the most ardent football diehard can struggle to find much to get worked up about in the preseason.\nTitle: Passage 6\\Content: NFL schedule 2017: Team-by-team, week-by-week preseason matchups. April 10, 2017 5:46pm EDT April 10, 2017 5:13pm EDT The NFL's preseason schedule for 2017 was released Monday, about a week ahead of the league's projected release date for the 2017 regular-season schedule. Here is the NFL preseason schedule for 2017.\nTitle: Passage 7\\Content: The Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts square off in the Hall of Fame Game on Sunday night, the first contest of the NFL's 65-game preseason schedule. The annual game in Canton, Ohio, kicks off 27 consecutive weekends of NFL football stretching to Super Bowl LI on Feb. 5 at NRG Stadium in Houston.\nTitle: Passage 8\\Content: August 7, 2016. Marcio Jose Sanchez/Associated Press. The good news: The NFL is back. The bad news: The NFL regular season doesn't start for another month. Even the most ardent football diehard can struggle to find much to get worked up about in the preseason.\nTitle: Passage 9\\Content: NFL SCHEDULE: Release info for regular season. The 2017 NFL preseason schedule includes eight nationally televised games, including the preseason-opening Hall of Fame Game, which this year features the Cowboys and Cardinals."
] |
April 10, 2017 5:46pm EDT April 10, 2017 5:13pm EDT The NFL's preseason schedule for 2017 was released Monday, about a week ahead of the league's projected release date for the 2017 regular-season schedule.
|
[
"Passage 6"
] |
Subsets and Splits
No community queries yet
The top public SQL queries from the community will appear here once available.