forestry Crossword Puzzles
Unit 5 Vocabulary 2026-01-23
Across
- the saturation of soil with water, often due to excessive rain, poor drainage, or over-irrigation, which displaces air in the soil pores and triggers oxygen deficiency
- the agricultural practice of growing a single crop species over a large area
- a forestry practice where all or most trees in a designated area are cut down at once, often to maximize timber yield or clear land
- meeting present needs without compromising future generations, balancing environmental protection, social equity, and economic viability
- the shift of populations to cities, transforming rural land into built-up areas, leading to habitat loss, increased pollution
- any substance, natural or synthetic, added to soil or plants to supply essential nutrients, primarily Nitrogen (N), Phosphorus (P), and Potassium (K), to improve growth
Down
- growing two or more crops together in the same field to maximize land use, improve soil health, reduce pests, and diversify yields
- Agriculture is the science and practice of cultivating soil, raising livestock, and processing food and materials, vital for providing food, fiber, and fuel globally.
- the degradation of productive drylands into increasingly arid, barren land due to climate change
- a complex, tree-dominated ecosystem consisting of interacting biotic (plants, animals, microorganisms) and abiotic (soil, water, climate) components
- the outward, low-density growth of cities into undeveloped land, characterized by car-dependent development, single-use zoning
- the sustainable management of pest populations (insects, weeds, pathogens) by introducing or enhancing their natural enemies
- a mid-20th-century transformation in agriculture, boosting food production (especially wheat and rice) in developing nations through new technologies
- any substance (chemical or biological) designed to kill, repel, or control organisms considered pests, like insects, weeds, fungi, or rodents, to protect crops, livestock, and human health
- the excess water from precipitation (rain, snowmelt) or irrigation that flows over land surfaces, instead of soaking into the ground
15 Clues: the agricultural practice of growing a single crop species over a large area • the degradation of productive drylands into increasingly arid, barren land due to climate change • the sustainable management of pest populations (insects, weeds, pathogens) by introducing or enhancing their natural enemies • ...
Built by Labor: Rail, Timber, and Trade 2025-08-29
Across
- machine that cuts or grinds wood into small chips, often used to process branches, limbs, or logging waste.
- route, a path or network used by traders to move goods from one location to another, historically by land or water.
- wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees.
- post, a place where goods were exchanged, often located in remote or frontier areas and central to early commerce, especially between Indigenous peoples and settlers.
- jack, a tool used to lift one end of a log off the ground to make cutting easier and safer; also refers to some heavy equipment used in logging.
- wood from coniferous trees (like pine or spruce). It's generally lighter and used in construction and paper products.
Down
- the part of a tree that anchors it into the ground and absorbs water and nutrients; in forestry, roots can also impact soil and terrain stability.
- value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market.
- people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces.
- wood that comes from deciduous trees (trees that shed their leaves), such as oak or maple. It's typically denser and used in furniture or flooring.
- capacity, the maximum weight a vehicle, machine, or structure can safely carry or support — crucial in logging and transportation.
- engineered wood made from thin layers (plies) of wood veneer glued together. It’s strong and used in construction and furniture.
- rails, long bars of steel that form the track on which trains run, designed to support heavy loads and provide a smooth rolling surface.
- animal skins that still have the fur on them, often traded for goods in historical fur trade economies.
- ties, also sleepers, these are rectangular supports (usually wood or concrete) that hold the rails in place and maintain the correct spacing.
15 Clues: value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market. • people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces. • wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees. • ...
Executive Departments 2020-03-07
Across
- Its purpose is to foster, promote, and develop the wellbeing of the wage earners, job seekers, and retirees of the United States, such as improve working conditions.
- Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare).
- Responsible for enforcing the laws of the United States federal government, such as ensuring public safety against foreign and domestic threats.
- Its purpose is to create jobs, promote economic growth, encourage sustainable development and block harmful trade practices of other nations.
- Responsible for the national highways and for railroad and airline safety, such as registration of vehicles and its related activities.
- A department of the federal executive branch entrusted with formulating military policies and maintaining American military forces.
Down
- Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world.
- Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them.
- Responsible for developing and executing federal laws related to farming, forestry, rural economic development, and food, such as inspecting foods for people’s safety.
- Responsible for promoting economic prosperity and ensuring the financial security of the United States, such as managing federal finances.
- Manages public lands and minerals, national parks, and wildlife refuges, also responsible for endangered species conservation and other environmental conservation efforts.
- Its mission is to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness, such as giving funds to students.
- Works in the civilian sphere to protect the United States within, at, and outside its borders. Its stated goal is to prepare for, prevent, and respond to domestic emergencies, particularly terrorism.
- Responsible for national policies that improve and develop the Nation's communities, and enforce fair sheltering laws, such as increasing homeownership.
- Responsible for advancing the national security of the US through the implementation of policies regarding, for example, nuclear power, fossil fuels, etc.
15 Clues: Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare). • Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them. • Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world. • ...
Built by Labor: Rail, Timber, and Trade 2025-08-29
Across
- jack, a tool used to lift one end of a log off the ground to make cutting easier and safer; also refers to some heavy equipment used in logging.
- ties, also sleepers, these are rectangular supports (usually wood or concrete) that hold the rails in place and maintain the correct spacing.
- post, a place where goods were exchanged, often located in remote or frontier areas and central to early commerce, especially between Indigenous peoples and settlers.
- the part of a tree that anchors it into the ground and absorbs water and nutrients; in forestry, roots can also impact soil and terrain stability.
- wood from coniferous trees (like pine or spruce). It's generally lighter and used in construction and paper products.
- engineered wood made from thin layers (plies) of wood veneer glued together. It’s strong and used in construction and furniture.
- route, a path or network used by traders to move goods from one location to another, historically by land or water.
- wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees.
Down
- rails, long bars of steel that form the track on which trains run, designed to support heavy loads and provide a smooth rolling surface.
- people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces.
- machine that cuts or grinds wood into small chips, often used to process branches, limbs, or logging waste.
- wood that comes from deciduous trees (trees that shed their leaves), such as oak or maple. It's typically denser and used in furniture or flooring.
- value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market.
- animal skins that still have the fur on them, often traded for goods in historical fur trade economies.
- capacity, the maximum weight a vehicle, machine, or structure can safely carry or support — crucial in logging and transportation.
15 Clues: value, the current price a good, product, or asset would sell for on the open market. • people or businesses involved in buying and selling goods, often in trade networks or marketplaces. • wood primarily harvested to make paper products. It's often made from smaller, lower-quality trees. • ...
Agriculture 2024-04-08
Across
- Pest control methods that rely on natural (chemical-free) remedies.
- The federal agency that proposes programs and implements policies and regulations related to American farming, forestry, ranching, food quality, and nutrition.
- This federal agency is responsible for protecting the public health by ensuring the safety, efficacy, and security of human and veterinary drugs, biological products, and medical devices; and by ensuring the safety of our nation's food supply, cosmetics, and products that emit radiation.
- This federal agency protects people and the environment from significant health risks, sponsors and conducts research, and develops and enforces environmental regulations.
- Means to pursue knowledge and practices that can lead to more environmentally friendly and ecologically responsible decisions and lifestyles, which can help protect the environment and sustain its natural resources for current and future generations.
- An organism such as a plant, animal, or microorganism that has had its genetic material (DNA) changed using technology that generally involves the specific modification of DNA, including the transfer of specific DNA from one organism to another.
- Farming in such a way to protect the environment, aid and expand natural resources and to make the best use of nonrenewable resources.
Down
- the technique of growing plants using a water-based nutrient solution rather than soil
- The raising of aquatic plants and animals for human use or consumption
- A way of buying and selling products that makes certain that the people who produce the goods receive a fair price
- Rejects the use of all artificial agricultural chemicals, including pesticides used to control insects, diseases and weeds.
- The science or occupation of cultivating the soil, producing crops, and raising livestock
12 Clues: Pest control methods that rely on natural (chemical-free) remedies. • The raising of aquatic plants and animals for human use or consumption • the technique of growing plants using a water-based nutrient solution rather than soil • The science or occupation of cultivating the soil, producing crops, and raising livestock • ...
Executive Departments 2020-03-07
Across
- Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world.
- Its purpose is to create jobs, promote economic growth, encourage sustainable development and block harmful trade practices of other nations.
- Responsible for developing and executing federal laws related to farming, forestry, rural economic development, and food, such as inspecting foods for people’s safety.
- Responsible for national policies that improve and develop the Nation's communities, and enforce fair sheltering laws, such as increasing homeownership.
- Its purpose is to foster, promote, and develop the wellbeing of the wage earners, job seekers, and retirees of the United States, such as improve working conditions.
- Its mission is to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness, such as giving funds to students.
- Manages public lands and minerals, national parks, and wildlife refuges, also responsible for endangered species conservation and other environmental conservation efforts.
Down
- Responsible for enforcing the laws of the United States federal government, such as ensuring public safety against foreign and domestic threats.
- Responsible for promoting economic prosperity and ensuring the financial security of the United States, such as managing federal finances.
- Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them.
- Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare).
- Works in the civilian sphere to protect the United States within, at, and outside its borders. Its stated goal is to prepare for, prevent, and respond to domestic emergencies, particularly terrorism.
- A department of the federal executive branch entrusted with formulating military policies and maintaining American military forces.
- Responsible for the national highways and for railroad and airline safety, such as registration of vehicles and its related activities.
- Responsible for advancing the national security of the US through the implementation of policies regarding, for example, nuclear power, fossil fuels, etc.
15 Clues: Its mission is to enhance and protect the well-being of all Americans (Obamacare). • Responsible for providing vital services to America's ex-soldiers, such as providing health care services to them. • Functions as the diplomatic wing of the federal government, such as promoting American foreign policy throughout the world. • ...
Ch.9 Dvelopment 2014-04-23
Across
- The percentage of a country's people who can read and write
- A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of economic development
- A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development
- Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes
- Economic policies imposed on less developed countries by international agencies to create conditions encouraging international trade, such as raising taxes, reducing government spending, controlling inflation, selling publicly owned utilities to private corporations and charging citizens more for services
- The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials
- Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country
- The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications , and utilities, sometimes extended to the provision of all goods and services to people, in exchange for payment
- Indicator of level of development for each country, constructed by the United Nations, combining income, literacy, education,and life expectancy
Down
- The portions if the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing, and forestry
- Eight international development goals that all members of the United Nations have agreed to achieve by 2015
- The value of a particular product compared to the amount if labor needed to make it
- Compares the ability of women and men to participate in economic and political decision making
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period
- A company that conducts research, operates factories, and sells products in many countries, not just where its headquarters or shareholders are located
- Alternative to international trade that emphasizes small businesses and worker-owned and democratically run cooperatives and requires employers to pay workers fair wages, permit union organizing, and comply with minimum environmental and safety standards
- A process of improvement in the material conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology
- The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy
18 Clues: The percentage of a country's people who can read and write • Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes • Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country • The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy • A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development • ...
Ch.9 Dvelopment 2014-04-23
Across
- Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country
- Compares the ability of women and men to participate in economic and political decision making
- A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of economic development
- The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials
- Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes
- The value of a particular product compared to the amount if labor needed to make it
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period
- Economic policies imposed on less developed countries by international agencies to create conditions encouraging international trade, such as raising taxes, reducing government spending, controlling inflation, selling publicly owned utilities to private corporations and charging citizens more for services
- Alternative to international trade that emphasizes small businesses and worker-owned and democratically run cooperatives and requires employers to pay workers fair wages, permit union organizing, and comply with minimum environmental and safety standards
- The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy
Down
- A process of improvement in the material conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology
- Eight international development goals that all members of the United Nations have agreed to achieve by 2015
- A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development
- A company that conducts research, operates factories, and sells products in many countries, not just where its headquarters or shareholders are located
- The portions if the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing, and forestry
- The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications , and utilities, sometimes extended to the provision of all goods and services to people, in exchange for payment
- Indicator of level of development for each country, constructed by the United Nations, combining income, literacy, education,and life expectancy
- The percentage of a country's people who can read and write
18 Clues: The percentage of a country's people who can read and write • Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes • Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country • The gross value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy • A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development • ...
Agricultural and Related Technology 2017-02-26
Across
- A machine with a series of curved discs on a shaft used to prepare the seedbed for seeds and plants.
- Selective breeding and pollinating, which allows people to develop plants and animals with desirable traits.
- The process of using enzymes to cut the DNA chain at any point and splice them back together with more desirable parts.
- The process of gathering a crop once it has matured.
- Using materials, information, and machines to produce the food and natural fibers needed to maintain life.
- Growing plants in nutrient solutions without soil.
- A human-made complex reproducing some facets of the natural environment.
- A machine that provides power to pull all types of farm equipment.
- A machine that picks up a windrow (band of hay) and conveys it into a baling chamber, where the hay is compressed into a cube.
- To place seeds in the ground to grow.
- The breeding, feeding, and training of animals.
- Artificial watering to maintain plant growth in areas too dry for successful farming.
- A machine used on farm land to remove weeds and open the soil for water.
- A machine used to harvest grains.
Down
- A device used to control and distribute water.
- A type of irrigation that uses main lines to bring water near the plants. Individual tubes or emitters bring water from the main lines to each plant.
- A part of technology dealing with using biological agents in an industrial process to produce goods or services.
- Developing and using devices and systems to plant, grow, and harvest crops. It also includes raising livestock for food and other useful products.
- A spray used to control insects and weeds that may damage farm crops.
- The growing and harvesting of fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants in controlled conditions. It uses ponds, instead of soil, to grow its crop.
- The operation of breaking and pulverizing soil.
- The science of crossbreeding livestock.
- A blade-shaped plowshare that cuts, lifts, and turns over the soil.
- The growing of trees for commercial use, such as lumber and timber products, paper and pulp, and chips and fibers.
- Grain, vegetables, or fruit that has been agriculturally cultivated.
25 Clues: A machine used to harvest grains. • To place seeds in the ground to grow. • The science of crossbreeding livestock. • A device used to control and distribute water. • The operation of breaking and pulverizing soil. • The breeding, feeding, and training of animals. • Growing plants in nutrient solutions without soil. • ...
mai mai 2023-06-22
Across
- I've always believed that _____________ counts more than money.
- (n) the science of planting and taking care of large areas of trees
- The clock was _________ ten as we went into the church.
- He's got a really bad _________, always scolding others.
- I'm going to _______ smoking as I know it is not good to health..
- It's a little _____________ that no one knows where he was at the time of the murder.
- I really ________ people who can work in such difficult conditions.
- I was not given ____________ (slow running) for half an hour before breakfast.
- The children had an __________ about/over what game to play
- Buyers can ___________ his latest novel to read on a mobile device.
- She has every right to be proud of her _________ achievements.
- Retailers provide the best service to customers to gain their _________________.
- It was a Sunday, so she could _______ in till almost lunch time.
- The device is __________ available only in Japan. It cannot be found in Hong Kong.
- Three children survived in the Amazon _________ after 40 days.
- (n) someone who enjoys and looks for dangerous and exciting experiences
- The dog has been her constant ___________ these past ten years.
- My income's rather variable, but I earn £175 a day on _______.
Down
- The gang admitted they had committed four recent bank ________.
- Sleeping Pillow has lost her job. She is now ____________.
- Bat e.m. became deeply __________ when his little master dumped him to the street.
- You will need _______________ from your parents to go on the trip.
- The fire was thought to have been caused by a gas _________.
- Shoplifting is ______.
- he alarm is __________ by the lightest pressure.
- It's___________ to have a goalkeeper _________. They need to try again next year.
- Mai Mai asked me to let him play Fifi, but I _________.
- (v) (of an aircraft) to move slowly on the ground
- ________ out, Dad. The train doesn't leave for another hour!
- Any painting by Van Gogh is worth a _________.
- She has an ___________ memory and can remember details and names that I've long forgotten.
- Bat e.m. is a ______________ bat as he could plant special species of grapes.
- I'm _________ of the dark. Please stay with me.
- The town's ________ rests on its beautiful cathedral.
34 Clues: Shoplifting is ______. • Any painting by Van Gogh is worth a _________. • I'm _________ of the dark. Please stay with me. • he alarm is __________ by the lightest pressure. • (v) (of an aircraft) to move slowly on the ground • The town's ________ rests on its beautiful cathedral. • The clock was _________ ten as we went into the church. • ...
Interconnected world terms 2023-04-19
Across
- a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country
- refers to an economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful
- manufacturing activities, which may be referred to as secondary production
- movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities
- a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it
- little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living
- an economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency
- the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry
Down
- business owners and consumers still make most of the economic decisions. However, governments may regulate the markets in order to provide stability
- economic system in which the government controls the means of production
- the transmission of cultural elements, such as customs, ideas, and religions, from one group to another
- industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country
- It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory
- economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies
- intergovernmental organization of the world’s major oil-exporting nations
- a country has significant industrial development and therefore a relatively high standard of living
- informal name for India's large and popular movie industry
- policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country
- results in the exchange of cultures between groups and the creation of new settlements
- the act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently
- people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them
- underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location
- the process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers
26 Clues: informal name for India's large and popular movie industry • a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country • industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers. • the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry • The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe • ...
Chapter 19 Review 2025-02-03
Across
- Nickname for radical workers' organization formed in 1905 to unite all wage-earners regardless of race, ethnicity, or gender, and committed to the destruction of capitalism.
- The careful management of natural resources so that they yield the greatest benefit to present generations while maintaining their potential to meet the needs of future generations.
- New York artists who shared a focus on urban life.
- Racially integrated civil rights organization founded in 1910; it continues to work to end discrimination.
- Settlement house founded by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in 1889 in Chicago; supposedly haunted.
- African American reformer and journalist, prominent opponent of lynching and advocate for racial justice and woman suffrage.
- Last name of birth-control advocate who believed so strongly that information about birth control was essential to help women escape poverty that she violated laws against its dissemination.
- Popular name given to the Progressive Party in 1912.
- One who advocates reserving natural areas so as to protect them against human disturbance.
- The conviction that women are and should be the social, political, and economic equals of men.
- Last name of Montana reformer who, in 1916, became the first woman elected to Congress; she worked for woman suffrage and to protect women in the workplace.
- Progressive Era journalists who wrote articles exposing corruption in city government, business, and industry.
Down
- Political interest group advocating prohibition, founded in 1895; it organized through churches.
- Head of the Forestry Service from 1898 to 1910; promoted conservation and urged careful planning in the use of resources.
- Name applied by critics to the Taft administration's policy of supporting U.S. investments abroad.
- Last name of the socialist writer and reformer whose novel The Jungle exposed unsanitary conditions in the meatpacking industry.
- A 1906 law authorizing the Interstate Commerce Commission to set maximum railroad rates and regulate other forms of transportation.
- Full pen name of Samuel L. Clemens, prominent American author of the late nineteenth century; he wrote The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and other literary classics.
- Provisions that permit voters to make political decisions directly, including the direct primary, initiative, referendum, and recall.
- Theodore Roosevelt's term for his efforts to deal fairly with all.
20 Clues: New York artists who shared a focus on urban life. • Popular name given to the Progressive Party in 1912. • Theodore Roosevelt's term for his efforts to deal fairly with all. • One who advocates reserving natural areas so as to protect them against human disturbance. • ...
UAV Mapping Crossword Puzzle 2024-11-11
Across
- - Metadata includes descriptive information that aids in interpreting UAV mapping data.
- - Proper exposure ensures images are captured with ideal lighting conditions in UAV mapping.
- - A point cloud is generated from LiDAR data to form detailed 3D maps.
- - Drones allow surveyors to generate both 2D and 3D maps of geographical locations.
- - Georeferencing aligns aerial images to real-world coordinates for accurate mapping.
- - Remote sensing in UAV mapping captures Earth’s surface data from above.
- - Orthophoto maps are created from aerial images that are geometrically corrected.
- - UAV mapping requires a consistent altitude to avoid distortions in the data.
- - Side overlap between images ensures enough data for accurate stitching in mapping.
- - Metadata, such as GPS coordinates and timestamps, provides essential context for UAV maps.
- - UAV mapping enables high-resolution aerial imagery for precise terrain analysis.
- - Orthomosaic software stitches together images to create a seamless aerial map.
Down
- - Multispectral mapping helps monitor vegetation health in agriculture and forestry.
- - Orthomosaic maps are widely used in large-scale terrain analysis and planning.
- - Virtual fences set boundaries for the mapping area, preventing drones from veering off.
- - An orthophoto is a corrected aerial image, ideal for precise measurements and mapping.
- - The Remote Pilot in Command (RPIC) is responsible for UAV control during mapping flights.
- - Ground Station Pro (GS Pro) software automates flight plans for mapping missions.
- - Front overlap between images is necessary to generate accurate 3D models.
- - Environmental factors like wind and lighting can impact the quality of mapping.
- - The shooting angle of the drone camera affects the level of detail in the mapped area.
- - Line spacing is set between flight paths to capture data efficiently during mapping.
- - Structure from Motion (SfM) is a technique that generates 3D models from a series of images.
- - UAV mapping data can be imported into a GIS for further spatial analysis.
- - Photogrammetry in UAV mapping uses images to create accurate maps and measurements.
- - Capture mode determines the intervals for image capture based on distance or time.
- - The overlap ratio is essential in UAV mapping to ensure comprehensive area coverage.
- - The drone’s flight pattern is crucial for capturing overlapping images during mapping.
- - Spatial resolution of the camera determines the detail and clarity of a UAV map.
- - LiDAR technology is frequently used with UAVs to create detailed topographic maps.
30 Clues: - A point cloud is generated from LiDAR data to form detailed 3D maps. • - Remote sensing in UAV mapping captures Earth’s surface data from above. • - Front overlap between images is necessary to generate accurate 3D models. • - UAV mapping data can be imported into a GIS for further spatial analysis. • ...
FFA CDEs 2022-09-08
Across
- In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
- In which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
- In which competitive event do participants develop practical skills in marketing?
- In which competitive event do participants learn and apply skills that can be applied to personal financial management?
- In which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems, and waste management?
- In which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- In which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- In which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
Down
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resources systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep, and meat goats?
- In which competitive event do you have to be a seventh, eighth, or ninth grade student?
- In which competitive event do participants learn to participate effectively in a business meeting?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- In which competitive event do participants identify parasites in animals?
- In which competitive event do participants present a prepared manuscript in a six- to eight-minute presentation?
- In which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- In which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- In which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice, and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- In which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- In which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
24 Clues: In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat? • ...
FFA CDEs 2022-09-08
Across
- In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
- In which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
- In which competitive event do participants develop practical skills in marketing?
- In which competitive event do participants learn and apply skills that can be applied to personal financial management?
- In which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems, and waste management?
- In which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- In which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- In which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
Down
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resources systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep, and meat goats?
- In which competitive event do you have to be a seventh, eighth, or ninth grade student?
- In which competitive event do participants learn to participate effectively in a business meeting?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- In which competitive event do participants identify parasites in animals?
- In which competitive event do participants present a prepared manuscript in a six- to eight-minute presentation?
- In which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- In which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- In which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice, and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- In which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- In which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
24 Clues: In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat? • ...
REVIEW4 - QTR 2 2025-10-13
Across
- – Used to dig and cut trenches.
- – Used to remove weeds.
- - A type of plant that produces fruits, which are mature ovaries containing seeds, as part of its reproductive process.
- - Used to mix and cut soil.
- - Deals with the large-scale cultivation and production of perennial trees to supply food, timber, rubber, and other tree-based raw materials to different industries.
- - A government agency that teaches skills for farming and agribusiness.
- – Used to level the surface of seedbeds.
- A type of soil that is best for ornamental plants
- – Used in planting seedlings and cultivating plants.
- - involves sowing seeds in a seed box or seedbed before moving them to a garden plot
- - A government agency that protects the rights of farm workers.
- - An international agency that fights hunger and helps improve food supply around the world.
- – Used to spray plants with disease protection.
- – Used to cut roots when digging
- - A government agency that helps farmers sell their products
- – Used to sharpen garden tools.
Down
- - Used to carry tools and garden soil.
- – Used to cut grasses and remove dried branches and leaves.
- - Are edible plants. Their bulbs, flowers, fruits, leaves, roots, seeds, shoots, stems, and tubers may be consumed raw or cooked.
- - A government agency that protects the environment (forests, land, water, and animals).
- – Used to water the plants.
- - Used to dig and mix manure.
- - involved cutting a mature stem from a healthy plant with a sharp tool and planting it directly into the ground
- - A government agency that provides training and seminars for farmers.
- Are plants grown to beautify our homes and surroundings. Their visual appeal can enhance the atmosphere of our homes, gardens, and landscapes.
- - A government agency that utilize the science and inventions to help farming.
- – Is the science of soil management and crop production, including food crops, fodder crops, fiber crops, sugar, and oil seeds.
- - Is the science, art, or practice of cultivating the soil, producing crops, harvesting, and marketing the resulting products
- – Focused on cultivating flowers, fruits, vegetables, ornamental plants, and species and processing these plants into products like condiments and beverages.
- - directly sowing seeds into the garden plot or spot
30 Clues: – Used to remove weeds. • – Used to water the plants. • - Used to mix and cut soil. • - Used to dig and mix manure. • – Used to dig and cut trenches. • – Used to sharpen garden tools. • – Used to cut roots when digging • - Used to carry tools and garden soil. • – Used to level the surface of seedbeds. • – Used to spray plants with disease protection. • ...
CDEs 2022-08-31
Across
- In which competitive event do participants develop the ability to express themselves on a given subject without having prepared or rehearsed the content in advance?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate the ability to evaluate, select, and manage a modern herd of dairy cattle?
- In which competitive event do participants learn about production priorities through the evaluation and selection of beef cattle, swine, sheep, and meat goats?
- In which competitive event do participants present a prepared manuscript in a six- to eight-minute presentation?
- In which competitive event do participants work to respond to a scenario involving soils, water, ecosystems, and waste management?
- In which competitive event do participants identify plant materials, disorders, and equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders?
- In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies?
- In which competitive event do participants work collaboratively to effectively communicate and advocate for agriculture?
- In which competitive event do participants develop practical skills in marketing?
Down
- In which competitive event do participants research the pros and cons of an agricultural issue and present to a panel of judges?
- In which competitive event do participants learn and apply skills that can be applied to personal financial management?
- In which competitive event do participants demonstrate skills based on environmental and natural resources systems, technology, and agricultural machinery equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants learn to participate effectively in a business meeting?
- In which competitive event do participants work to develop, practice, and demonstrate skills needed for seeking employment in the agriculture industry?
- In which competitive event do participants evaluate poultry and poultry products within the industry?
- In which competitive event do you have to be a seventh, eighth, or ninth grade student?
- In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat?
- In which competitive event do participants identify parasites in animals?
- In which competitive event do participants identify food products based on aroma?
- In which competitive event do participants identify different types of cheese?
- In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment?
- In which competitive event do participants pot or propagate nursery stock?
- In which competitive event do participants identify weeds, seeds, and crops?
24 Clues: In which competitive event do participants create sales strategies? • In which competitive event do participants identify equine equipment? • In which competitive event do participants identify trees and disorders? • In which competitive event do participants identify various cuts of meat? • ...
LATest2020 2020-07-13
Across
- (n) synonym: relaxation/ leisure/ free-time pursuits
- (adj) the quality of a material that does not allow water to go through it
- (adj) the quality of a material that does not allow water to go through it
- (adj) connected with the countryside - opposite of urban
- (n) something that is intended to make life more pleasant or comfortable or convenient for the people – for instance a park/ a public transit system
- (n) a specific area of ground – for building or a habitat
- (adj) causing little or no damage to the environment and therefor able to continue for a long time
- (adj) describes a landscape that is unable to produce plants or fruits: synonym infertile
- (n uncountable) the leaves of a plant or tree: greenery
- (n) the process of land degradation (for instance through over-farming or tree removal) such that it becomes dry and infertile
- (n) a wild plant that grow unwanted in your planting bed (as a verb: to undertake their removal)
- (n) the process by which people leave the countryside to live in cities
- (n) the (arguably) inborn affinity/ love human beings have for other forms of life
Down
- (n) uniformity: the quality of consisting of parts or people that are similar to each other or are of the same type
- (adj) describes a trees that lose and regrow their leaves seasonally
- (n) the science or practice of planting and taking care of trees and forests
- (n) the practice of supplying land with water so that crops and plants will grow
- (n) the process of making land that is underwater or in poor condition suitable for building or farming
- (n) distinct ecosystem that is flooded by water - either permanently or seasonally
- (n) the process of removing salt from seawater
- (adj) synonym: rare or in short supply
- (adj) peoples or plants belonging to a very specific place: synonym: native
- (n) another word for a bush
- (n) a place at the centre of activity – often use to describe a transport node
- (n) small rounded stones used in drainage or as a finish for paths
- (n) rainwater that falls impermeable surfaces and can be collected for watering
- (n) a layer of rock/ sand/ earth that contains water or allows water to pass through it
27 Clues: (n) another word for a bush • (adj) synonym: rare or in short supply • (n) the process of removing salt from seawater • (n) synonym: relaxation/ leisure/ free-time pursuits • (n uncountable) the leaves of a plant or tree: greenery • (adj) connected with the countryside - opposite of urban • (n) a specific area of ground – for building or a habitat • ...
2408 Industry TEST5 2024-08-26
Across
- Which word means "to get ready for something"?
- Which word means to move things or people from one place to another?
- What do we call the work of making goods in factories?
- What do we call a place where minerals are taken from the ground?
- Which word means "to reach a destination"?
- What is the term for a place where goods are made?
- What is the process of moving goods from raw materials to the final consumer called?
- Which word means "to carry something to another place"?
- Which word means "not enough, very little"?
- Which type of industry processes raw materials into products like cars and clothes?
- What planet is often called the "Red Planet"?
- What is a central place for important activities called?
- Which type of industry involves activities like farming, forestry, and fishing?
- What is the place called where people grow crops and raise animals?
- What is the name of the planet where we live?
- What word describes something that is shared by many people or things?
- What word means "to make products from raw materials"?
- Which word means "to finish something"?
Down
- What word describes doing something repeatedly to improve a skill?
- What do we call the basic substances used to make products?
- What word is used to describe something related to more than one country?
- What phrase describes the everyday activities and routines that people do?
- What word describes something that is not the same as something else?
- What word describes something that is hard to understand or solve?
- What do we call the action of keeping something in a safe place for later use?
- What do we call the process of collecting crops from the field when they are ready?
- Which word means "to need something for a purpose"?
- What word describes something that is related to one country?
- What is the term for a large town with many buildings and people?
- What word means "to leave a place and start a journey"?
- If something is very hard to find and not common, what word do we use?
- What do we call the practice of farming and raising animals?
32 Clues: Which word means "to finish something"? • Which word means "to reach a destination"? • Which word means "not enough, very little"? • What planet is often called the "Red Planet"? • What is the name of the planet where we live? • Which word means "to get ready for something"? • What is the term for a place where goods are made? • ...
Interconnected world terms 2023-04-19
Across
- a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country
- refers to an economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful
- manufacturing activities, which may be referred to as secondary production
- movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities
- a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it
- little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living
- an economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency
- the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry
Down
- business owners and consumers still make most of the economic decisions. However, governments may regulate the markets in order to provide stability
- economic system in which the government controls the means of production
- the transmission of cultural elements, such as customs, ideas, and religions, from one group to another
- industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country
- It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory
- economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies
- intergovernmental organization of the world’s major oil-exporting nations
- a country has significant industrial development and therefore a relatively high standard of living
- informal name for India's large and popular movie industry
- policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country
- results in the exchange of cultures between groups and the creation of new settlements
- the act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently
- people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them
- underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location
- the process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers
26 Clues: informal name for India's large and popular movie industry • a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country • industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers. • the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry • The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe • ...
Upson County Extension/4-H 2025-10-21
Across
- clearer thinking
- one of the top three Agriculture Commodities for Upson County focusing on hay/baleage
- a camp providing recreational and athletic facilities for children during the summer vacation period
- test providing information on the soil actual nutrients status
- practice of farming, including cultivation of the soil for the growing of crops and the rearing of animals
- the color between blue and yellow
- one of the top three Agriculture Commodities for Upson County focusing on timber/trees
- voluntary work intended to help people in a particular local areas of need.
- symbol for 4-H
- a competitive shooting group, often for young people, that uses BB guns for sport and competition
- SHOWING, an event where individuals, often 4-H and FFA members, exhibit livestock animals to be judged
- a gathering of members of a club, an organization with a common interest, to meet, discuss, and make decisions about their shared purpose
- the process of acquiring social, cognitive, and emotional skills to prepare young people for adulthood through positive, supportive experiences and relationships
- member of the 4-H program who is in kindergarten through third grade
- the color of milk or fresh snow
Down
- dried livestock food source
- Upson County's Top Agriculture Commodity focusing on meat chickens
- a team-based academic competition where two teams compete to answer questions on a wide range of subjects
- a group of athletes who compete in the shooting sports disciplines of trap, skeet, and sporting clays
- trained, responsible junior/senior 4-H members who mentor younger 4-H members, teach workshops, and assist with leadership roles at events and in clubs
- domestic fowl, such as chickens, turkeys, ducks, and geese
- large ruminant livestock animals
- member of the 4-H program who is in fourth through sixth grade
- an instructional session where individuals learn culinary techniques, recipes, and food preparation skills
- the U.S. federal agency for national service and volunteerism
- better living
- an organized group of young people who advise local governments, community organizations, or businesses on issues that affect youth
- the process of analyzing a water sample to determine its quality, safety, and suitability for various uses
- larger service
- greater loyalty
30 Clues: better living • symbol for 4-H • larger service • greater loyalty • clearer thinking • dried livestock food source • the color of milk or fresh snow • large ruminant livestock animals • the color between blue and yellow • domestic fowl, such as chickens, turkeys, ducks, and geese • the U.S. federal agency for national service and volunteerism • ...
MegaMapping Crossword 2023-09-15
Across
- Most of Canada is in the ___________ forest vegetation zone.
- The country of the ________________ lies just south of Canada
- The Canadian province of _________ lies at 50N / 70W
- Territory of Canada northeast of Northwest Territories
- The border between California and _______ lies along the ______ West longitude line.
- 30N / 90W is located in the _____________________ climate zone
- The vegetation zone found at 35N / 115W
- The Gulf of _______ is located at 25N / 90W
- State found at 30N / 100W
- Body of water at 30N / 70W
- Province found at 55N / 125W
- The climate zone that the Colorado River flows through
- The Canadian province located northeast of Maine
- The vegetation zone found at 40N / 80W is the __________ forest vegetation zone.
- The resource found at 50N / 110W
- The northern tip of _________ is located at about 71N / 155W
- City located just south of Los Angeles
- ________ is the state with the most petroleum resources.
- The state of ________ is located northeast of Utah and southwest of South Dakota
- 40N / 120W is located in the ____________ climate zone
- 40N / 90W is located in the _____________________ climate zone.
Down
- In southern Canada, much of the land is used for ___________, or cutting down trees.
- The ____________ half of the United States is more densely populated than the western half is.
- Cities with over 8,000,000 people have a larger _____ on the map than the other cities do.
- All of North America is located north of the ___________.
- Texas has an abundance of ______________, a resource used to make gasoline.
- The southern tip of ________ is located at about 24N / 81W
- The resource that can be found at 35N / 77W
- The land use found at 45N / 95W.
- Physical Feature found at 60N / 80W
- The type of grassland found in the central United States
- The most common resource in the eastern United States is _________.
- State located between New Mexico and Louisiana
- Body of water at 40N / 140W
- State located south of Oklahoma
- The water around all of North America is used for ___________________________.
- At the southern tip of Florida, you will find a nice __________ wet and dry climate
- Island located along the 50N line just west of southern Canada
- The country of __________ lies north of the United States
- The _____________ half of North America is much less densely populated than the southern half is.
- All of the islands of northern Canada are in the ________ climate zone.
41 Clues: State found at 30N / 100W • Body of water at 30N / 70W • Body of water at 40N / 140W • Province found at 55N / 125W • State located south of Oklahoma • The land use found at 45N / 95W. • The resource found at 50N / 110W • Physical Feature found at 60N / 80W • City located just south of Los Angeles • The vegetation zone found at 35N / 115W • ...
Chapter 11 America Comes of Age 2024-02-14
Across
- Led the Division of Forestry department and recommended that the national parks be preserved for the public.
- This act made the natives have American citizenship with full voting rights
- Employees come together to decide work schedules and pay
- Who discovered yellow fever?
- The support for or advocacy of social reform
- Managing editor of McClure's, famous for uncovering social problems
- Allows people to approve or reject laws passed by the legislature
- Great White Fleet was the nickname for what
- What did Frances Willard support
- A group that met at Niagara Falls to tackle African Americans to vote
- The leading figure in the settlement house movement, also played a part in the settlement success
- This gave people the power to put a proposed new law on the voting ballot in the next upcoming elections
- Believed that women were hurt by unfair prices for goods needed to run their homes
- This act was made to keep the wealthy and powerful people from taking advantage of the small business wonders and the poor
- Citizens voted to select nominees for upcoming elections
- Settlement houses and other civic groups played a prominent role in what
- Set aside 148 mil acres of forest land and 80 million acres of mineral lands
Down
- More than 100 of these groups in many cities joined a network called
- This person's efforts helped make Yosemite National Park in 1890
- Gave voters the power to remove public servants from office before their term ended
- The 32nd president of the United States
- Which amendment gave women the right to vote
- The blended ideas of the German socialism and the American Progressivism
- African American teacher and journalist who helped form the National Association of Colored Women (NACW)
- What war was in 1904-1905
- What country had an affair in 1902
- What were journalists called
- This person took pictures of unsafe living environments where the urban poor lived and wrote a book about it shocking the nation
- Gave special labels and urged women to buy them
- Canal connecting the Pacific and Atlantic
- A community center that provided social services to the urban poor
31 Clues: What war was in 1904-1905 • Who discovered yellow fever? • What were journalists called • What did Frances Willard support • What country had an affair in 1902 • The 32nd president of the United States • Canal connecting the Pacific and Atlantic • Which amendment gave women the right to vote • Great White Fleet was the nickname for what • ...
Glossary of key terms: What is a business? 2025-10-10
Across
- the process of increasing the worth of a product or service by improving it or enhancing its appeal to customers, so that the final selling price exceeds the cost of inputs.
- the business function concerned with managing people—recruiting, training, motivating, and maintaining an effective workforce.
- the business function responsible for managing money, recording transactions, and analyzing financial information to support decision-making.
- the function that converts raw materials and resources into finished goods or services efficiently and effectively.
- desires for goods and services that are not essential for survival but improve quality of life.
- the part of the economy that provides services to consumers and businesses rather than producing goods.
- the basic requirements essential for human survival, such as food, water, clothing, and shelter.
- people who take the initiative to set up, organize and manage a business, assuming the financial risks in the hope of earning a profit.
- an organization that produces goods and/or provides services to satisfy customer needs and wants, usually with the aim of making a profit.
- the part of the economy concerned with manufacturing and construction—transforming raw materials into finished products.
- the part of the economy involved in extracting natural resources, such as farming, fishing, mining, or forestry.
- intangible activities that provide value to customers, such as education, banking, or transport.
- the process of combining inputs or resources to create goods or services that have value.
- physical and tangible products that can be seen, touched, and stored, such as clothing, cars, or computers.
Down
- the difference between the selling price of a product and the cost of the materials and components used to produce it.
- individuals or organizations that buy goods or services from a business; they may or may not be the end users.
- the process of identifying and meeting customer needs profitably through market research, product design, pricing, promotion, and distribution.
- the part of the economy focused on knowledge-based activities like research, information technology, and consultancy.
- the resources required to produce goods and services—typically land, labour, capital and enterprise.
- the process of starting and running a new business venture, involving creativity, risk-taking, and decision-making to exploit business opportunities.
- individuals or groups who use goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants.
21 Clues: individuals or groups who use goods and services to satisfy their needs and wants. • the process of combining inputs or resources to create goods or services that have value. • desires for goods and services that are not essential for survival but improve quality of life. • ...
MODYUL 1: MGA HAMONG PANGKAPALIGIRAN 2019-02-09
Across
- Tumutukoy ang mga gampaning ito sa mga karapatan, obligasyon, at mga inaasahan ng lipunan na kaakibat ng posisyon ng indibiduwal.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga pangyayari na nagdudulot ng panganib at pinsala sa tao, kapaligiran, at mga gawaing pang-ekonomiya. Maaaring ang disaster ay natural gaya ng bagyo, lindol, at pagputok ng bulkan o gawa ng tao tulad ng digmaan at polusyon?
- tumutukoy ito sa mga kahulugan at paliwanag tungkol sa pinaniniwalaan at tinatanggap na totoo.
- paggamit ng puno bilang panggatong. Isang halimbawa ay ang paggawa ng uling mula sa puno.
- tumutukoy sa kakayahang makita ang kaugnayan ng mga personal na karanasan ng isang tao at ang lipunang kanyang ginagalawan.
- Tumutukoy ang social group sa dalawa o higit pang taong may magkakatulad na katangian na nagkakaroon ng ugnayan sa bawat isa at bumubuo ng isang ugnayang panlipunan.
- Ang likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan – pagbaba ng kabuuang timbang ng mga nahuhuling isda sa 3 kilo bawat arawmula sa dating 10 kilo.
- ito ay nagaganap sa pagitan ng isang tao at ilang malalapit sa kanya.
- . Ayon kay Carter (1992), ito ay isang dinamikong proseso na sumasakop sa sa pamamahala ng pagpaplano, pag-oorganisa, pagtukoy ng mga kasapi, pamumuno at pagkontrol.?
- paggamit ng media upang mamulat ang mgamamamayan sa suliraning pangkapaligiran. Nanguna sa reforestationng La Mesa Watershed at sa Pasig River Rehabilitation Project.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa inaasahang pinsala sa tao, ari-arian, at buhay dulot ng pagtama ng isang kalamidad. Ang vulnerable na bahagi ng pamayanan ang kadalasang may mataas na risk dahil wala silang kapasidad na harapin ang panganib na dulot ng hazard o kalamidad. Vulnerable Human Risk Structural Risk 88 6. Resilience–a
- tumutukoy sa paglalapat ng kahulugan sa isang bagay ng mga taong gumagamit dito.
- naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao
- sa panahon ng pananakopa anong taon Itinayo ang kauna-unahang Forestry School (ngayon ay College of Forestry and Natural Resources) sa Los Baños, Laguna.
Down
- ito ay likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan, mabilis at patuloy na pagliit ng forest cover mula sa 17 ektarya noong 1934 ay naging 6. 43 milyong ektaraya noong 2003.?
- . ang pagiging resilient ng isang komunidad ay tumutukoy sa kakayahan ng pamayanan na harapin ang mga epekto na dulot ng kalamidad. Ang pagiging resilient ay maaaring istruktural, ibig sabihin ay isasaayos ang mga tahanan, tulay o gusali upang maging matibay
- tumutukoy ito sa mga asal, kilos, o gawi na binuo at nagsisilbing pamantayan sa isang lipunan. -- nagsisilbing batayan ng mga ugali, aksyon, at pakikitungo ng isang indibiduwal sa lipunang kaniyang kinabibilangan.
- . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan.
- Ito ay isang NGO kong saan tumutulong sa pagtatayo ng MRF sa mga barangay?
- - ay binubuo ng mga indibiduwal na may pormal na ugnayan sa isa’t isa. Karaniwang nakatuon sa pagtupad sa isang gawain ang ganitong uri ng ugnayang panlipunan. Isang halimbawa nito ay ang ugnayan sa pagitan ng amo at ng kaniyang manggagawa, gayundin ang ugnayan ng mga manggagawa sa isa’t isa.
- Ang_______ay tumutukoy sa mga taong sama -samang naninirahan sa isang organisadong komunidad na may iisang batas, tradisyon, at pagpapahalaga.
- pampublikong paksa kung saan apekto ang buong pamayanan.
- . Tumutukoy ang __________sa mga basurang nagmula sa mga tahanan at komersyal na establisimyento, mga basura na nakikita sa paligid, mga basura na nagmumula sa sektor ng agrikultura at iba pang basurang hindi nakakalason
- Ang ___________ay tumutukoy sa pagsusuri sa lawak, sakop, at pinsala na maaaring danasin ng isang lugar kung ito ay mahaharap sa isang sakuna o kalamidad sa isang partikular na panahon
- . ito naman ay tumutukoy sa mga hazard na dulot ng kalikasan. Ilan sa halimbawa nito ay ang bagyo, lindol, tsunami, thunderstorms, storm surge, at landslide. Ipinakikita sa kasunod na larawan ang pagbabalita sa pagdating ng isang malakas na bagyo.
- tumutukoy ang vulnerability sa tao, lugar, at imprastruktura na may mataas na posibilidad na maapektuhan ng mga hazard. Ang pagiging vulnerable ay kadalasang naiimpluwensiyahan ng kalagayang heograpikal at antas ng kabuhayan.
- Anong batas ang ipinatupad upang magkaroon ng legal na batayan sa iba’tibang desisyon at proseso ng pamamahala ng solid waste sa bansa?
- - ay tumutukoy sa malapit at impormal na ugnayan ng mga indibiduwal. Kadalasan, ito ay mayroon lamang maliit na bilang. Halimbawa nito ay ang pamilya at kaibigan.
- . Isa sa sinasabing dahilan nito ay ang patuloy na pag-init ng daigdig o global warming dahil sa mataas na antas ng konsentrasyon ng carbon dioxide na naiipon sa atmosphere. Nanggagaling ito mula sa usok ng pabrika, mga iba’t ibang industriya, at pagsusunog ng mga kagubatan.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga banta na maaaring dulot ng kalikasan o ng gawa ng tao. Kung hindi maiiwasan, maaari itong magdulot ng pinsala sa buhay, ari-arian, at kalikasan.?
- at pangangalaga sa kalikasan at pagsusulong ng kapayapaan sa kabila ng mga nabanggit na batas at programa ay nananatili pa rinang mga suliranin sa solid waste sa Pilipinas
31 Clues: . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan. • naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao • pampublikong paksa kung saan apekto ang buong pamayanan. • ito ay nagaganap sa pagitan ng isang tao at ilang malalapit sa kanya. • Ito ay isang NGO kong saan tumutulong sa pagtatayo ng MRF sa mga barangay? • ...
Human Impact 2020-11-13
Across
- revolution leading to an increase in medical understanding that led to prolonging the lives of humans
- The science of planting and caring for forests and the management of growing timber
- the process or industry of obtaining coal or other minerals from a mine.
- reduction in the number or quantity of something
- The use of Earth's renewable and nonrenewable natural resources in ways that do not constrain resource use in the future.
- farming for the raising of livestock (particularly cattle)
- revolution leading to a dramatic social change in important structures brought about relatively quickly by the introduction of new technology
- the amount of food required to feed a population. Food demand increases as populations increase
- revolution when human beings first domesticated plants and animals and no longer relied entirely on hunting and gathering
- the amount of food that is available to the population.
- the cultivation of a single crop in a given area.
- the process by which fertile land becomes desert, typically as a result of drought, deforestation, or inappropriate agriculture.
Down
- refers to a decrease in the pH of the ocean over an extended period of time, caused primarily by uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere
- an undesirable in the natural environment that is caused by the introduction of substances that are harmful to living to organisms or by excessive wastes, heat, noise, or radiation
- an increase in the ratio or density of people living in urban areas rather than in rural areas
- revolution of rapid growth in the use of machines in manufacturing and production that began in the mid-1700s
- the capture of wild fish and other seafood living in the waters
- the process of removing salt from seawater
- A form of oxygen that has three oxygen atoms in each molecule; when not in the stratosphere, it is an unstable toxic gas with a pungent odor and powerful oxidizing properties
- refers to the biosphere, or all the spaces on earth occupied by living organisms
- the practice of growing, breeding, and caring for plants and animals that are used for food, clothing, housing, transportation, and other purposes
- Organisms that have been genetically altered to improve their usefulness
- urban air pollution composed of a mixture of smoke and fog produced from industrial pollutants and burning fuels
23 Clues: the process of removing salt from seawater • reduction in the number or quantity of something • the cultivation of a single crop in a given area. • the amount of food that is available to the population. • farming for the raising of livestock (particularly cattle) • the capture of wild fish and other seafood living in the waters • ...
Chapter Seven: Best Management Practices and Water Quality 2023-04-04
Across
- Crossing: provides a hard, stable area where livestock or equipment can cross a stream without damaging the streambed or banks.
- the raising of traditionally undomesticated animals in an agricultural setting to produce
- the practice and science of cultivating soil for growing crops to provide food, fiber, and other commodities and products for people to purchase and consume.
- Department: poultry, cattle and calves, greenhouse and nursery, cotton, and soybeans.
- Law: protect and promote U.S. agricultural health, administer the Animal Welfare Act, carry out wildlife damage management activities, and ensure that America's agricultural exports are protected from unjustified trade restrictions.
- in the area that is close to (a place)
- Plots or parcels of land
- crops which are alive year-round and are harvested multiple times before dying.
- a natural filter of vegetation adjacent to a natural or manmade water body.
- the area of land that drains or sheds water into a specific receiving waterbody, such as a lake or a river.
- corn, soybeans, hay, wheat and tobacco.
- harvesting: the cutting or removal of timber for purposes of sale or profit for wood product purposes, such as lumber, biomass or fire wood, in conformance with the California Forest Practice Rules
- he process and practices used to remove excess water from the soil surface and from the soil profile.
- the natural or intentional restocking of existing forests and woodlands that have been depleted, usually through deforestation.
Down
- that all soil disturbing activities at the site have been completed and that a uniform perennial vegetative cover with a density of at least 70%
- Quality: the suitability of water to be used to irrigate and tend animals.
- also known as agricultural chemicals – are substances that are used to protect plants against pests.
- Commission: protecting, expanding and promoting the sustainable management of woodlands.
- Alabama Department of Environmental Management.
- Maps: a geographical representation showing diversity of soil types and/or soil properties (soil pH, textures, organic matter, depths of horizons etc.) in the area of interest.
- represent the earliest form of organized social life.
- species-rich habitats performing valuable ecosystem services such as flood protection, water quality enhancement, food chain support and carbon sequestration.
- a measure of water clarity.
- breeding, raising, and harvesting fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants.
- transitory or quickly fading.
25 Clues: Plots or parcels of land • a measure of water clarity. • transitory or quickly fading. • in the area that is close to (a place) • corn, soybeans, hay, wheat and tobacco. • Alabama Department of Environmental Management. • represent the earliest form of organized social life. • breeding, raising, and harvesting fish, shellfish, and aquatic plants. • ...
Unit 2: Brazil 2025-12-01
Across
- types of economic activities. A way to categorize different parts of the economy.
- these are processed for their oil and food for livestock. A smaller percentage is processed for human consumption and made into products
- coming from or relating to a foreign country or an outside institution/ businesses; international
- the “Manufacturing and building” sector of the economy. Ex: steel factories, construction, automotive, oil refineries.
- the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem
- a slum or shantytown located within or on the outskirts of the country's large cities
- the action of clearing a wide area of trees
- the “Providing service and distributing” sector of the economy. Ex: healthcare, legal services, banking, real estate, data management, education, government, retail.
- the process of converting land to a new purpose by constructing buildings or making use of its resources
- a problem or issue
- a system of paved and unpaved roads designed to increase settlement and exploitation of the vast underpopulated Amazon River Basin.
- using resources in such a way that they will continue to be available in the future
- businesses or industries involved in agriculture (farming) in some way
- the process of working together toward the same goal
- taking advantage of something or someone; unfairly benefiting from someone or something else
Down
- to control and make use of
- to protect from harm or destruction, prevent wasteful harm or over-use
- the“Getting and growing” sector of the economy. Ex: fishing, mining, forestry, farming, ranching.
- a change in global or regional climate patterns, in particular, a change apparent from the mid to late 20th century onwards and attributed largely to the increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide produced by the use of fossil fuels.
- the basic physical and organizational structures and facilities.(ex: roads, power grids) needed for the operation of a society to function
- belonging to a group that has a common national or cultural tradition (not the same as race)
- a group who have traditionally lived on that land, native
- a set of circumstances that makes it possible to do something
- the term for the region of Brazil considered “the Amazon”
- relating to affairs and activities within a country; domestic
25 Clues: a problem or issue • to control and make use of • the action of clearing a wide area of trees • the process of working together toward the same goal • a group who have traditionally lived on that land, native • the term for the region of Brazil considered “the Amazon” • a set of circumstances that makes it possible to do something • ...
MODYUL 1: MGA HAMONG PANGKAPALIGIRAN 2019-02-09
Across
- desisyon at proseso ng pamamahala ng solid waste sa bansa?
- mga suliranin sa solid waste sa Pilipinas
- tumutukoy ang vulnerability sa tao, lugar, at imprastruktura na may mataas na posibilidad na maapektuhan ng mga hazard. Ang pagiging vulnerable ay kadalasang naiimpluwensiyahan ng kalagayang heograpikal at antas ng kabuhayan.
- tumutukoy sa paglalapat ng kahulugan sa isang bagay ng mga taong gumagamit dito.
- Ang_______ay tumutukoy sa mga taong sama -samang naninirahan sa isang organisadong komunidad na may iisang batas, tradisyon, at pagpapahalaga.
- . Ayon kay Carter (1992), ito ay isang dinamikong proseso na sumasakop sa sa pamamahala ng pagpaplano, pag-oorganisa, pagtukoy ng mga kasapi, pamumuno at pagkontrol.?
- sa dating 10 kilo.
- Tumutukoy ang mga gampaning ito sa mga karapatan, obligasyon, at mga inaasahan ng lipunan na kaakibat ng posisyon ng indibiduwal.
- Ang ___________ay tumutukoy sa pagsusuri sa lawak, sakop, at pinsala na maaaring danasin ng isang lugar kung ito ay mahaharap sa isang sakuna o kalamidad sa isang partikular na panahon
- sa panahon ng pananakopa anong taon Itinayo ang kauna-unahang Forestry School (ngayon ay College of Forestry and Natural Resources) sa Los Baños, Laguna.
- pagtrato at pangangalaga sa kalikasan at pagsusulong ng
- . ito naman ay tumutukoy sa mga hazard na dulot ng kalikasan. Ilan sa halimbawa nito ay ang bagyo, lindol, tsunami, thunderstorms, storm surge, at landslide. Ipinakikita sa kasunod na larawan ang pagbabalita sa pagdating ng isang malakas na bagyo.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga pangyayari na nagdudulot ng panganib at pinsala sa tao, kapaligiran, at mga gawaing pang-ekonomiya. Maaaring ang disaster ay natural gaya ng bagyo, lindol, at pagputok ng bulkan o gawa ng tao tulad ng digmaan at polusyon?
- ito ay tumutukoy sa inaasahang pinsala sa tao, ari-arian, at buhay dulot ng pagtama ng isang kalamidad. Ang vulnerable na bahagi ng pamayanan ang kadalasang may mataas na risk dahil wala silang kapasidad na harapin ang panganib na dulot ng hazard o kalamidad. Vulnerable Human Risk Structural Risk 88 6. Resilience–a
- kabila ng mga nabanggit na batas at programa ay nananatili pa rin
- . Isa sa sinasabing dahilan nito ay ang patuloy na pag-init ng daigdig o global warming dahil sa mataas na antas ng konsentrasyon ng carbon dioxide na naiipon sa atmosphere. Nanggagaling ito mula sa usok ng pabrika, mga iba’t ibang industriya, at pagsusunog ng mga kagubatan.
- tumutukoy ito sa mga kahulugan at paliwanag tungkol sa pinaniniwalaan at tinatanggap na totoo.
Down
- Tumutukoy ang social group sa dalawa o higit pang taong may magkakatulad na katangian na nagkakaroon ng ugnayan sa bawat isa at bumubuo ng isang ugnayang panlipunan.
- Ang likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan – pagbaba ng kabuuang timbang ng mga nahuhuling isda sa 3 kilo bawat araw
- ito ay nagaganap sa pagitan ng isang tao at ilang malalapit sa kanya.
- - ay tumutukoy sa malapit at impormal na ugnayan ng mga indibiduwal. Kadalasan, ito ay mayroon lamang maliit na bilang. Halimbawa nito ay ang pamilya at kaibigan.
- . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan.
- ito ay tumutukoy sa mga banta na maaaring dulot ng kalikasan o ng gawa ng tao. Kung hindi maiiwasan, maaari itong magdulot ng pinsala sa buhay, ari-arian, at kalikasan.?
- paggamit ng puno bilang panggatong. Isang halimbawa ay ang paggawa ng uling mula sa puno.
- pampublikong paksa kung saan apekto ang buong pamayanan.
- Anong batas ang ipinatupad upang magkaroon ng legal na batayan sa iba’t
- paggamit ng media upang mamulat ang mga
- tumutukoy sa kakayahang makita ang kaugnayan ng mga personal na karanasan ng isang tao at ang lipunang kanyang ginagalawan.
- Ito ay isang NGO kong saan tumutulong sa pagtatayo ng MRF sa mga barangay?
- La Mesa Watershed at sa Pasig River Rehabilitation Project.
- - ay binubuo ng mga indibiduwal na may pormal na ugnayan sa isa’t isa. Karaniwang nakatuon sa pagtupad sa isang gawain ang ganitong uri ng ugnayang panlipunan. Isang halimbawa nito ay ang ugnayan sa pagitan ng amo at ng kaniyang manggagawa, gayundin ang ugnayan ng mga manggagawa sa isa’t isa.
- sa suliraning pangkapaligiran. Nanguna sa reforestation
- . Tumutukoy ang __________sa mga basurang nagmula sa mga tahanan at komersyal na establisimyento, mga basura na nakikita sa paligid, mga basura na nagmumula sa sektor ng agrikultura at iba pang basurang hindi nakakalason
- naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao
- tumutukoy ito sa mga asal, kilos, o gawi na binuo at nagsisilbing pamantayan sa isang lipunan. -- nagsisilbing batayan ng mga ugali, aksyon, at pakikitungo ng isang indibiduwal sa lipunang kaniyang kinabibilangan.
- ito ay likas na yaman ng Pilipinas sa kasalukuyan, mabilis at patuloy na pagliit ng forest cover mula sa 17 ektarya noong 1934 ay naging 6. 43 milyong ektaraya noong 2003.?
- . ang pagiging resilient ng isang komunidad ay tumutukoy sa kakayahan ng pamayanan na harapin ang mga epekto na dulot ng kalamidad. Ang pagiging resilient ay maaaring istruktural, ibig sabihin ay isasaayos ang mga tahanan, tulay o gusali upang maging matibay
37 Clues: sa dating 10 kilo. • paggamit ng media upang mamulat ang mga • mga suliranin sa solid waste sa Pilipinas • . Ilegal na pagputol sa mga puno sa kagubatan. • naglalayong baguhin ang kaugalian at pananaw ng tao • sa suliraning pangkapaligiran. Nanguna sa reforestation • pagtrato at pangangalaga sa kalikasan at pagsusulong ng • ...
Trees and Forests Vocabulary Review 2020-02-21
Across
- An organism that's made of both fungus and algae (plant) cells
- Tiny tubes running up a plant's trunk that transport water and minerals upwards from the roots to the branches and leaves.
- A perennial, woody plant that has a trunk and is at least a few metres tall
- The outer covering of a tree that protects the inside
- The green pigment inside plants. Traps light energy used for photosynthesis
- A place that a type of animal or plant lives
- The inner bark tissue of a tree that transports nutrients from the leaves to the rest of the tree
- Trees that have cones and needles
- The amount of different species living in an ecosystem
- The care and use of forests. Works to protect forests
- The loss of water through the pores in leaves
- A plant eater
- Living organisms that break down dead material
- Any organism that can create its own food from sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water
- Rebuilding a forest by planting or reseeding
- Non-living parts of an ecosystem
- A small perennial plant
- The process by which a plant uses sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water to create sugar
- A forested areas used for recreation
- An area of living and non-living parts that interacts and lives together
Down
- Living parts of an ecosystem
- Activities you do for fun!
- An organism that feeds on other organisms to gain matter and energy
- The top branches and leaves of the trees in a forest
- The chemical process of turning sugar into energy. It releases carbon dioxide.
- A meat-eating animal
- A gas made of carbon and oxygen. It's breathed out by humans and animals
- An organism that eats both plants and animals
- The practice of managing, conserving, and utilizing forests for wood products
- Tiny holes on the underside of leaves that allow gases in and out of the leaves
- Trees and plants that loves their leaves each fall
- Small parts of coniferous trees which contain the seeds
- Removing all the trees from a section of forest at once
- A group of trees
- A diagram showing the eating relationships of organisms in an ecosystem
35 Clues: A plant eater • A group of trees • A meat-eating animal • A small perennial plant • Activities you do for fun! • Living parts of an ecosystem • Non-living parts of an ecosystem • Trees that have cones and needles • A forested areas used for recreation • A place that a type of animal or plant lives • Rebuilding a forest by planting or reseeding • ...
lumber industry crossword puzzle 2025-10-14
Across
- what is a large, powerful stationary saw with a rotating, disc-shaped blade used to break down raw logs into lumber
- what is a machine used to smooth and size rough-cut timber into finished dimensional lumber, flooring, and other products
- what is a controlled, oven-like chamber used to remove moisture from wood
- what is a heavy machine that grabs felled trees and rapidly removes their branches and cuts them into specific, uniform log lengths
- what is a heavy-duty vehicle used to pull or drag felled trees from the logging site to a roadside landing
- what is a heavy, off-road vehicle used to transport cut logs from the stump in the forest to a roadside landing
- what is a critical section of uncut wood used to control the direction and safety of a falling tree.
- what is the unprocessed, cut section of a tree trunk, used as the raw material for producing lumber, furniture, and other wood products
- what is a powerful machine that uses a system of cables and winches to move logs from their stump to a landing or collection point
Down
- what is a portable, motorized saw used for felling trees, processing timber, and other forestry-related tasks.
- what is wood that has been processed into uniform and useful sizes like beams and planks, primarily for construction and finishing
- what is the raw material—a living or felled plant—that is processed into various products like timber, lumber, and pulp
- what is a specialized machine that fells, delimbs, and cuts trees into specific log lengths (bucking)
- what is a machine used to straighten and smooth the rough, irregular edges of sawn boards.
- what is a cut or indentation made into a piece of wood for a specific purpose
- what is a specialized vehicles used to transport wood at all stages of the supply chain
- what is a manufacturing plant that converts raw logs into usable lumber through a series of powerful, motorized saws
- what is a heavy-duty machine used for lifting, sorting, stacking, and transporting logs and other wood products
- what is a high-performance power saw that uses a continuous, looping band of toothed steel to make precise, efficient cuts
- what is a tool used by loggers for felling and bucking trees.
20 Clues: what is a tool used by loggers for felling and bucking trees. • what is a controlled, oven-like chamber used to remove moisture from wood • what is a cut or indentation made into a piece of wood for a specific purpose • what is a specialized vehicles used to transport wood at all stages of the supply chain • ...
Land, Soil, Water, Natural Vegetation and Wildlife Resources 2025-08-19
Across
- – Another name for community land resources.
- - An international convention that lists several species of animals and birds in which trade is prohibited.
- – Factor of soil formation related to altitude and slope.
- – Type of irrigation that checks water losses through seepage and evaporation.
- – Conservation method where rocks are piled up to slow the flow of water.
- - A natural resource that plants produce that we need to breathe.
- – Caused by untreated sewage, chemicals, and industrial effluents.
- – Land owned by the community for common use like fodder, fruits, nuts, or medicinal herbs.
- - The name for protected areas linked through a global network to demonstrate conservation and development.
- – The main natural source of fresh water on land.
- - A large animal with tusks mentioned as being on the verge of extinction
- – Practice of making broad flat steps on steep slopes to reduce surface runoff.
- - The name for a system where living beings are inter-related and interdependent.
- – Rows of trees planted in dry regions to check wind movement.
- – Collecting and storing rainwater for future use.
- – Stones, grass, or soil used to build barriers along slopes to collect water.
- – Conservation method where bare ground between plants is covered with straw or organic matter to retain moisture.
Down
- - The type of vegetation found in cold Polar Regions.
- - One of the major concerns for wildlife that results in a sharp decline in the number of particular species.
- – Growing alternate rows of different crops to reduce soil erosion.
- - The layer of the Earth that includes land.
- - The collective name for all the living parts of the Earth.
- – Artificial method of supplying water to crops.
- – Type of land owned by individuals.
- – Thin layer of grainy substance covering the surface of the earth, containing minerals, humus, water, and air.
- – Irrigation method useful in dry regions to conserve water.
- – Factor of soil formation that influences the rate of weathering and humus formation.
- – A renewable resource covering three-fourths of the earth’s surface.
- – The way land is used for agriculture, forestry, mining, building houses, and setting up industries.
- - The sphere of water on Earth.
- – Determines colour, texture, and mineral content of soil.
- – The washing away of the fertile top layer of soil.
- park - The name for a natural area designated to protect the ecological integrity of one or more ecosystems.
- – The uppermost layer of soil rich in humus and vegetation.
34 Clues: - The sphere of water on Earth. • – Type of land owned by individuals. • – Another name for community land resources. • - The layer of the Earth that includes land. • – Artificial method of supplying water to crops. • – The main natural source of fresh water on land. • – Collecting and storing rainwater for future use. • ...
Sustainability words 2023-05-23
Across
- It is the process by collecting, separating and transforming materials that have been discarded, to give them a new use or turn them into new products.
- agents Chemical, biological or physical compounds that can cause harm or disease when they come into contact with living organisms, including humans, animals and plants.
- use The use of natural resources and ecosystem services responsibly, guaranteeing their long-term conservation and avoiding their depletion or irreversible degradation.
- The capacity of a material or substance to decompose or disintegrate naturally through biological processes, generally through the action of microorganisms, such as bacteria and fungi.
Down
- areas Are natural or urban spaces that are covered with vegetation, such as parks, gardens, forests, squares and vegetation zones in cities.
- Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth.
- It refers to the introduction or presence in the environment of physical, chemical or biological substances or agents that alter its natural composition and may be harmful to human health, flora, fauna and ecosystems in general.
- It is a chemical compound composed of two oxygen atoms bonded to one carbon atom. It is a colorless, odorless, non-flammable gas found naturally in the Earth's atmosphere.
- Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats.
- Organic matter of plant or animal origin that is used as an energy source. It includes a wide range of materials, such as agricultural residues, forestry residues, food residues, energy crops and wood industry by-products.
10 Clues: Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth. • Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats. • ...
Sustainability words 2023-05-23
Across
- It is the process by collecting, separating and transforming materials that have been discarded, to give them a new use or turn them into new products.
- agents Chemical, biological or physical compounds that can cause harm or disease when they come into contact with living organisms, including humans, animals and plants.
- use The use of natural resources and ecosystem services responsibly, guaranteeing their long-term conservation and avoiding their depletion or irreversible degradation.
- The capacity of a material or substance to decompose or disintegrate naturally through biological processes, generally through the action of microorganisms, such as bacteria and fungi.
Down
- areas Are natural or urban spaces that are covered with vegetation, such as parks, gardens, forests, squares and vegetation zones in cities.
- Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth.
- It refers to the introduction or presence in the environment of physical, chemical or biological substances or agents that alter its natural composition and may be harmful to human health, flora, fauna and ecosystems in general.
- It is a chemical compound composed of two oxygen atoms bonded to one carbon atom. It is a colorless, odorless, non-flammable gas found naturally in the Earth's atmosphere.
- Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats.
- Organic matter of plant or animal origin that is used as an energy source. It includes a wide range of materials, such as agricultural residues, forestry residues, food residues, energy crops and wood industry by-products.
10 Clues: Cycle It is the natural cycle of birth, growth, reproduction and death that occurs in all forms of life on Earth. • Is a type of fuel produced from renewable organic matter, such as agricultural crops, vegetable residues, vegetable oils and animal fats. • ...
American Crossword Puzzle 2022-01-26
Across
- "[BLANK] was named for Queen Elizabeth I of England, who was known as the Virgin Queen. Historians think the English adventurer Sir Walter Raleigh suggested the name about 1584. That year, Elizabeth gave Raleigh permission to colonize the [BLANK] region."
- became a state on December 7th, 1787.[BLANK]encompasses 2,489 square miles.It is the smallest state but also one of the most densely populated states in the U.S.
- The[BLANK]Colony was founded in 1632 after its charter was approved by King Charles 1st.
- The land in the 'New' World was granted to Captain John Mason, who named the new settlement after his homeland in 'Hampshire' County, England.
- [BLANK]means 'at the great hill', or 'large hill place'.
- was founded by Puritans and there was no tolerance for other religions.
- It was the birthplace of wine!
Down
- Like the NC but southern.
- the New York Colony had enough agricultural land, coal, forestry, furs, and iron ore. The colony likewise produced major crops, particularly wheat, making it the breadbasket colony.
- it doesn't snow until January and that's only 2 inches.
- The Province of [BLANK], also known as the [BLANK] Colony, was a British North American colony founded by William Penn after receiving a land grant from Charles II of England in 1681. The name Pennsylvania refers to William's father, Admiral Sir William Penn.
- was one of the Middle Colonies of Colonial America and became the U.S. state of New Jersey in 1776. The colony had originally been settled by the Dutch as part of New Netherland, but came under British rule after the surrender of Fort Amsterdam in 1664, becoming a proprietary colony.
- The colony was first named "Roodt Eylandt" by Dutch trader Adriaen Block (1567–1627), who had explored that area for the Netherlands. The name means "red island" and it refers to the red clay that Block reported there.
13 Clues: Like the NC but southern. • It was the birthplace of wine! • it doesn't snow until January and that's only 2 inches. • [BLANK]means 'at the great hill', or 'large hill place'. • was founded by Puritans and there was no tolerance for other religions. • The[BLANK]Colony was founded in 1632 after its charter was approved by King Charles 1st. • ...
AP Human Geography! Chapter 9 Development 2012-06-03
Across
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period (normally a year).
- Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country.
- The portion of the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from earth’s surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing and forestry.
- The percentage of a country’s people who can read and write.
- Compares the ability of women and men to participate in economic and political decision making.
- A company that conducts research, operates factories, and sells products in many countries, not just where its headquarters or shareholders are located.
- states that LDCs tend to have a higher dependency ratio, the ratio of the number of people under 15 or over 64 to the number in the labor force.
- the gross value of the product minus the cost of raw materials and energy.
- A country that is at a relatively early stage in the process of economic development.
- Alternative to international trade that emphasizes small businesses and worker-owned and democratically run cooperatives and requires employers to pay workers fair wages, permits union organizing and comply with minimum environmental and safety standards.
- The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications, and utilities, sometimes extended to the provisions of all goods and services to people, in exchange for payment.
- is the change in culture that occurs as diffusion of ideas and technology increases.
Down
- A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development.
- Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes.
- the value of a particular product compared to the amount of labor needed to make it.
- A process of improvement in the material conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology.
- describes the pattern of distribution of the MDCs and LDCs. When the earth is viewed from the North Pole, the MDCs are clustered near the center of the map while the LDCs are near the edges.
- Indicator of level of development for each country, constructed by the United Nations, combining income, literacy, education, and life expectancy.
- the portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming and assembling raw materials.
19 Clues: The percentage of a country’s people who can read and write. • Compares the level of development of women with that of both sexes. • Investment made by a foreign company in the economy of another country. • the gross value of the product minus the cost of raw materials and energy. • A country that has progressed relatively far along a continuum of development. • ...
Crossword Puzzle on Positive and Negative Aspects of Forestry Conflict 2020-04-23
10 Clues: the grant given • a group of people • a place in Indonesia • a number after thirteen • the place was accessible • maximum number per permit • when someone is threatened • when the result is uncertain • one of the two logging permits • decentralization needs it before implementation
Banned Book 2017-09-21
Across
- Blank Nona banned because the character created noodles through magic.
- The Blank was banned because of this statement in the book "A witch is always a woman. I do not wish to speak badly about women. Most women are lovely. But the fact remains that all witches are women. There is no such thing as a male witch."
- Why have the Harry Potter books been banned?
- Bill blank jr. book Brown Bear Brown Bear was banned because an author with the same name wrote a different book about Marxism.
- Blank Women was banned due to portraying strong female characters.
- The Three Little blank has been banned because it might offend believers of the Muslim faith.
- Blank and the Giant Peach parents are killed and he's sent to live with his two evil aunts. A gigantic fruit grows in their yard and crushes his aunts. There, he meets life-size insects and they all go on adventures together.
- William Blank author of Sylvester and the Magic Pebble was banned in 1977 by police associations in 12 states because it portrays police as pigs.
Down
- The Blank one of Doctor Seuss books was banned because it offended forestry workers.
- Blank the Spy was banned because she records suspicious activity and keeps a running list of observations on virtually everyone she knows.
- Banned books week is celebrated in the month of blank.
- Blank web a famous children's book banned in America because talking animals were seen to be ungodly.
- Where the Wild Blank Are Banned in the South parts of the U.S. because the fact that Max was “sent to bed without his supper" was considered to child abuse.
- What author of such adolescent girl books as Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret, Superfudge, and Freckle Juice has landed on the challenge book list more times than any other author Judy blank?
- Little Blank Riding Hood an American classic was banned because school districts objected to the use of alcohol in the illustration.
15 Clues: Why have the Harry Potter books been banned? • Banned books week is celebrated in the month of blank. • Blank Women was banned due to portraying strong female characters. • Blank Nona banned because the character created noodles through magic. • The Blank one of Doctor Seuss books was banned because it offended forestry workers. • ...
Unit 7 part 2 2022-12-07
Across
- A service that primarily meets the needs of other businesses, including professional, financial, and transportation services.
- A service that primarily meets the needs of individual consumers, including retail, education, health, and leisure services.
- These factors result from the unique characteristics of a location. These are labor, capital, and land.
- The Industrial Revolution, now also known as the First Industrial Revolution, was the transition to new manufacturing processes in Europe and the United States, in the period from about 1760 to sometime between 1820 and 1840.
- A theory that explains the distribution of services based on the fact that settlements serve as centers of market areas for services; larger settlements are fewer and farther apart than smaller settlements and provide services for a larger number of people who are willing to travel farther.
- A commodity, article, or service brought in from abroad (a foreign country) for sale.
- The transfer of goods or services from one person or entity to another, often in exchange for money. A system or network that allows trade is called a market.
- Makes something that gains volume or weight during production.
- A type of operation or industry that involves extracting or refining natural resources, such as mining, agriculture, forestry, and fishing.
Down
- A decision by a corporation to turn over much of the responsibility for production to independent suppliers.
- These factors involve transporting materials to and from a factory. A firm seeks a location that minimizes the cost of transporting inputs to the factory and finished goods to consumers.
- The period of social and economic change that transforms a human group from an agrarian society into an industrial society. This involves an extensive re-organization of an economy for the purpose of manufacturing.
- A process that links people around the world as a result of shared activities and interests. Fueled by technology and an expanding communication network, globalization creates cultural, social, environmental, health, and economic connections among countries.
- The area surrounding a central place from which people are attracted to use the place’s goods and services (also known as hinterland).
- Manufacturing based in homes rather than in factories, most common prior to the Industrial Revolution.
15 Clues: Makes something that gains volume or weight during production. • A commodity, article, or service brought in from abroad (a foreign country) for sale. • Manufacturing based in homes rather than in factories, most common prior to the Industrial Revolution. • ...
Banned Books 2017-09-21
Across
- Blank the Spy Banned because she records suspicious activity and keeps a running list of observations on virtually everyone she knows.
- Blank Nona banned because the character created noodles through magic.
- Why have the Harry Potter books been banned?
- Banned books week is celebrated in what month.
- Blank and the Giant Peach His parents are killed and he's sent to live with his two evil aunts. A gigantic fruit grows in their yard and crushes his aunts. There, he meets life-size insects and they all go on adventures together. What is the name of this book?
Down
- Blank the Wild Things Are Banned in the South parts of the U.S. because the fact that Max was “sent to bed without his supper" was akin to child abuse.
- Blank Women, the book was banned due to portraying strong female characters?
- Blank web which famous children's book was banned in America because talking animals were seen to be ungodly?
- The blank one of Doctor Seuss books banned because it offended forestry workers?
- The blank banned because of this statement in the book "A witch is always a woman. I do not wish to speak badly about women. Most women are lovely. But the fact remains that all witches are women. There is no such thing as a male witch."
- Litte blank Ridding Hood which classic was banned because school districts objected to the use of alcohol in the illustration?
- The blank blank Pigs banned because it might offend believers of the Muslim faith.
- Blank Steig Author of Sylvester and the Magic Pebble banned in 1977, police associations in 12 states urged the libraries to remove the book because it portrays police as pigs.
- Blank Martin Jr. Brown Bear Brown Bear banned because an author with the same name as this book’s author wrote a different book about Marxism.
- Blank Blume author of such adolescent girl books as Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret, Superfudge, and Freckle Juice has landed on the challenge book list almost more times than any other author?
15 Clues: Why have the Harry Potter books been banned? • Banned books week is celebrated in what month. • Blank Nona banned because the character created noodles through magic. • Blank Women, the book was banned due to portraying strong female characters? • The blank one of Doctor Seuss books banned because it offended forestry workers? • ...
Chapter 10 Development 2021-04-15
Across
- Compares the level of development of women with that of both genders.
- The portion of the economy concerned with manufacturing useful products through processing, transforming, and assembling raw materials.
- The value of the output of goods and services produced in a country in a year, including money that leaves and enters the country
- Indicator of the level of development for each country, constructed by United Nations, combining income, literacy, education, and life expectancy
- Theory developed by Immanuel Wallerstein that in an increasingly unified world economy developed countries form an inner core area whereas developing countries are found on the periphery and semi-periphery
- The ability of an individual, firm, or country to produce a good or service at a lower opportunity cost than other producers
- The portion of the economy concerned with the direct extraction of materials from Earth's surface, generally through agriculture, although sometimes by mining, fishing, and forestry.
- Seventeen goals adopted by the UN in 2015 to reduce disparities between developed and developing countries in 2030
- Activities involve facilitating complex decision making and the advancement of human capacities
- Alternative to international trade that emphasizes small businesses and worker-owned and democratically run cooperatives and requires employers to pay workers fair wages, permit union organizing, and comply with minimum environmental and safety standards.
Down
- An indicator constructed by the UN to measure the extent of each 16. country gender inequality in terms of reproductive health, empowerment, and the labor market
- The amount of money needed in one country to purchase the same goods and services in another country
- Provision of small loans and other financial services to individuals and small businesses in developing countries.
- The value of the total output of goods and services produced in a country in a given time period (normally 1 year).
- Control by a powerful country of its former colonies (or other less developed countries) by economic pressures.
- The portion of the economy concerned with transportation, communications, and utilities, sometimes extended to the provision of all goods and services to people in exchange for payment.
- The percentage of a country's people who can read and write.
- Highly skilled information-based services; usually includes management
18 Clues: The percentage of a country's people who can read and write. • Compares the level of development of women with that of both genders. • Highly skilled information-based services; usually includes management • Activities involve facilitating complex decision making and the advancement of human capacities • ...
Review Game 2025-03-21
Across
- the total amount of water withdrawn from its source for a specific purpose, such as public supply, domestic use, irrigation, thermoelectric-power cooling, or industrial processing.
- a type of air pollution characterized by a combination of smoke, fog, and chemical pollutants, often forming a thick haze, particularly in urban areas with high industrial activity and vehicle emissions.
- the gradual thinning of the Earth's ozone layer in the stratosphere, primarily caused by human-made chemicals like chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), leading to increased levels of harmful ultraviolet (UV) radiation reaching the Earth's surface.
- a plant, animal, or microorganism whose genetic material has been altered using biotechnology, often through genetic engineering, to introduce specific traits or characteristics that would not occur naturally.
- the process by which vegetation in drylands i.e. arid and semi-arid lands, such as grasslands or shrublands, decreases and eventually disappears.
- the process of removing dissolved salts and minerals from water.
- the activity of catching fish and other aquatic organisms from natural or managed water bodies, encompassing both recreational and commercial practices, and its impacts on ecosystems and populations.
- a type of electromagnetic radiation with shorter wavelengths than visible light,can cause skin cancer, premature aging and other skin damage,cataracts and other eye damage, immune system suppression.
- The process of making an area more urban.
Down
- the period of significant technological advancements in agriculture, primarily in the mid-20th century, that led to increased crop yields through the use of high-yielding crop varieties, fertilizers, pesticides, and irrigation.
- the contamination of water bodies by harmful substances, leading to a degradation of water quality and posing risks to human health and the environment.
- a form of agriculture that is based on growing only one type of a crop at one time on a specific field.
- the introduction of harmful materials into land or underground.
- the contamination of the air by harmful substances, including gases, particles, or other pollutants, that can negatively impact human health and the environment.
- decreasing levels of pH in the ocean, which makes the sea more acidic.
- the practice of managing and maintaining forest lands for commercial, public, and agricultural uses.
- the change in the number of individuals within a population over a specific period, influenced by birth rates, death rates, and migration
- the extraction of valuable geological materials and minerals from the surface of the Earth.
18 Clues: The process of making an area more urban. • the introduction of harmful materials into land or underground. • the process of removing dissolved salts and minerals from water. • decreasing levels of pH in the ocean, which makes the sea more acidic. • the extraction of valuable geological materials and minerals from the surface of the Earth. • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilise when its supply of resources remains constant.
- Meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- A social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
- Is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- Management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- The impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- Is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
- Is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- Range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
- Managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
Down
- Is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
- Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- Is a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock.
- Are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- A proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
21 Clues: Can be defined broadly or narrowly. • Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- Can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Is a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
- A proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- Is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock.
- Is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilise when its supply of resources remains constant.
- Are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
Down
- Is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
- Meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- Is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
- Managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- The impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- Are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
- Is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- A social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
21 Clues: Can be defined broadly or narrowly. • Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. • ...
NRT Crossword I 2023-10-16
Across
- The return of a population of forest plant to an area from which they have previously been destroyed or removed.
- A group of cells that contribute to a particular life function.
- The loss of topsoil due to the forces of wind or flowing water.
- Loss of water to the atmosphere from the leaf surfaces of plants.
- The flat part of a leaf; usually green or red in color.
- A class of tree that produces seeds inside an ovary or fruit; a flowering tree.
- A young tree that is more than 3' in height and up to 4" in diameter.
- A plant that converts solar energy and other plant nutrients to starches and sugars.
- A woody tissue that conducts water with dissolved nutrients and plant materials from the roots to the stems and leaves.
- One of several different layers in a soil profile.
- A young tree that is in the very early stages of development.
- An animal or other organism whose diet consists only of meat.
Down
- The scientific study of trees.
- The outer layer of cells that protect plant leaves, stems, flowers, seeds, and roots.
- A layer of meristem tissue located between the wood and the bark of a tree from which new wood and bark are produced.
- A tree that bears green leaves in all seasons.
- The science of planting and managing forests for specific purposes such as timber production, conservation and so on.
- A population of trees in a given location.
- An unhealthy disorder that can be traced back to a specific cause.
- Adapted to a water environment.
- Vegetation and waste materials containing large amounts of vegetable matter that is rich in cellulose
- The branch of biology that describes relationships between living organisms and the environments in which they live.
- The basic unit of life.
- Water found in or obtained from an aquifer.
- The process of removing bark from a log.
- A tree or shrub that produces cones containing seeds.
- Organic matter in soil; a source of nutrients for soil organisms and plants.
- A protective outer covering of root and stem tissues consisting of dead plant cells containing a waxy material.
- A tree that is fully developed for a specific purpose; usually 10-24" in diameter.
- The living environment of an organism.
- The part of a flower that produces the ovule or egg cell.
31 Clues: The basic unit of life. • The scientific study of trees. • Adapted to a water environment. • The living environment of an organism. • The process of removing bark from a log. • A population of trees in a given location. • Water found in or obtained from an aquifer. • A tree that bears green leaves in all seasons. • One of several different layers in a soil profile. • ...
Branches of science 2021-09-07
Across
- Study of cells.
- The practical application of science to commerce or industry
- The study of the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of living organisms
- Study of secret writing.
- Science and technology of electronic phenomena
- The branch of medicine dealing with the applications of radiant energy, including x-rays and radioisotopes
- The science of studying and managing forests and plantations, and related natural resources
- Study of fish.
- The science of matter and its interactions with energy and itself
- Communication between two minds at a distance with the help of emotions, thoughts and feelings.
- The study of human cultures both past and present. Study of apes and man.
- Deals with life or possibilities of life beyond the earth.
- The study of poisons and the effects of posisoning
- Study of virus.
- Deals with the study of blood vascular system.
- Study of heart.
- The study of animals
- The study of insects
- Science The systematic study of computing systems and computation
- Silk industry(culture of silk moth and pupa).
- Deals with the study of origin of new from old.
- Study of snakes.
- The study of climates and investigations of its phenomena and causes
Down
- Study of fruits.
- Study of skulls.
- Study of improvment of human race by applying laws of heredity. it is related with future generations.
- Study of cause of insects.
- Study concerning with the application and uses of very low temperature.
- Study of skin.
- Study of flower yeilding plants.
- The study of earthquakes and the movement of waves through the earth
- Study of the mind and behaviour
- Study of algae.
- The study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment
- The science of genes, heredity, and the variation of organisms Phonetics Concerning the sounds of a language.
- The science of classification of animals and plants
- The physics of energy, heat, work, entropy and the spontaneity of processes
- Natural phenomenon.
- Study of flower.
- Engineering The application of science, mathematics, and economics to the process of converting raw materials or chemicals into more useful or valuable forms
- The study of the behavior and properties of matter
- Science The science of the interactions between the physical, chemical, and biological components of the environment
- The study of the structure and organization of living things
- The scientific study of plant life
44 Clues: Study of skin. • Study of fish. • Study of cells. • Study of algae. • Study of virus. • Study of heart. • Study of fruits. • Study of skulls. • Study of flower. • Study of snakes. • Natural phenomenon. • The study of animals • The study of insects • Study of secret writing. • Study of cause of insects. • Study of the mind and behaviour • Study of flower yeilding plants. • ...
DR. JOSE P. LAUREL 2022-03-16
Across
- ISANG MAHARLIKA AT NAKIPAGLABAN SA MGA MANANAKOP NA KASTILA
- ANONG KULAY NG KURBATA NI JPL NOONG SYA AY NAMANATA NANG PUMANAW ANG KANYANG INA
- ILAN ANG NAGGING ANAK NI JPL
- IPINANGANAK NOONG ABRIL 22, 1849
- SI JPL AY ____ NA LALAKI SA LIMANG MAGKAKAPATID
- ILANG TAON SI JPL NOONG SYA AY PUMANAW?
- ITINATAG NI JPL UPANG MATULUNGAN ANG MAHIHIRAP
- SI GAT MASUNGIT ANG PINAKAMATANDANG ANAK NG?
- PANGILAN SA PWESTO SI JPL SA BAR EXAM?
- ANO ANG IBIG SABIHIN NG LAUREL?
- SINO ANG UGAT NG PAGKATAO NG ANGKANG LAUREL
- LUGAR KUNG SAAN IPINANGANAK SI JPL
- SAAN NAG ARAL SI JPL UPANG LUBOS NA MAUNAWAAN ANG BATAS NA SA PANAHONG IYON AY BATAY SA MGA BATAS NG MGA ESPANYOL?
- BINASE ANG PANGALANG LYCEUM
- MATAAS ANG MARKA NI JPL SA ____ AT ALGEBRA
- ANO ANG IKINAMATAY NI JPL?
- PANGALAN NG ASAWA NI JPL?
- NAGPAYO NA GAMITIN ANG APELYIDONG "LAUREL"
- NAGING GOBERNADORCILLO NG TANAUAN MULA 1887-1889
- ANONG KURSO ANG NATAPOS NI JPL
- BUWAN KUNG KELAN PINANGANAK SI JPL
- KINIKILALANG MANANANGGOL
- SAANG OSPITAL NAMATAY SI JPL
- BUWAN NG PAGKAMATAY NI JPL
- NARATING NI GAT MASUNIGT ANG ISLA NG PANAY AT ITINATAG ANG BAYAN NG ______
- KINILALA SI JPL BILANG _____ PRESIDENT
Down
- KINILALA SI JPL BILANG EHEKUTIBO ___ HUDIKATIBO
- IBINAYAD SA KASO NG PAMILYANG LAUREL NA IKINAUBOS NG KABUHAYAN NILA
- SAAN NAG ARAL SI JPL NG KOLEHIYO?
- PANGILANG PANGULO NG PILIPINAS SI JPL?
- BUONG PANGALAN NG JPL
- INA NI JPL
- SAAN IPINASYAL NI JPL ANG KANYANG INA?
- DAHILAN KUNG BAKIT BINIGYAN SI JPL NG KWINTAS NG KANYANG INA
- PANG ILAN SI JPL SA LIMANG MAGKAKAPATID?
- SA DATING PINAGTITIRIKAN NG OSPITAL NG SAN JUAN DE DIYOS SA INTRAMUROS MAYNILA, MATATAGPUAN NGAYON ANG ______
- NAKAKATANDANG KAPATID NI JOSE
- BUWAN KUNG SAAN ITINALAGA SI JPL BILANG PUNONG KLERK NG KAWANIHANG EHEKUTIBO
- ANONG BUWAN IPINANGANAK SI SOTERO
- NAGING ______ NG KATARUNGAN SI JPL NOONG DISYEMBRE17, 1941
- SI SOTERO AY NAMATAY DAHIL SA SAKIT NA?
- ANO ANG BINIGAY NI DONA JACOBA KAY JPL?
- AMA NI JPL
- SINO ANG NAGING KALABAN NI JPL NG SYA AY BUMALIK SA PULITIKA?
- NAGTRABAHO SYA BILANG___SA BUREU OF FORESTRY
- ILANG TAON SI JPL NOONG SYA AY NAULILA NG KANYANG AMA?
- SAAN NAGARAL SI JPL NOONG SYA AY 15 ANYOS?
- NILALARO NI JPL NOONG SYA AY BINARIL NG MGA GERILYANG PILIPINO?
- SAAN NAGTAPOS SI JPL NG DOCTOR OF CIVIL LAW
- KAIBIGAN NG PAMILYANG LAUREL
50 Clues: INA NI JPL • AMA NI JPL • BUONG PANGALAN NG JPL • KINIKILALANG MANANANGGOL • PANGALAN NG ASAWA NI JPL? • ANO ANG IKINAMATAY NI JPL? • BUWAN NG PAGKAMATAY NI JPL • BINASE ANG PANGALANG LYCEUM • ILAN ANG NAGGING ANAK NI JPL • SAANG OSPITAL NAMATAY SI JPL • KAIBIGAN NG PAMILYANG LAUREL • NAKAKATANDANG KAPATID NI JOSE • ANONG KURSO ANG NATAPOS NI JPL • IPINANGANAK NOONG ABRIL 22, 1849 • ...
Ecosystem Services 2021-03-25
Across
- The service of formation of soils and soil fertility that sustains crop and livestock production depends on the ecosystem processes of __ and nutrient cycling by soil micro-organisms.
- Recreation and nature-based tourism are significant sources of employment and income in most places in the world. Both of the recreational and tourism activities can be classified as __ services.
- Agricultural sectors such as crops, livestock, forestry and fisheries can provide both advantages and disadvantages towards the ecosystem services. In agriculture, the negative effects of __.
- Climate regulation; disease control and suppression of pathogens; water purification and regulation are the examples of __ services.
- The implementation and sustainability of __ in fisheries sectors can improve the function of mangrove as flood protection
- Fiber, food, freshwater, fuel wood and other essential resources are the examples of __ services.
- The changes ecosystem service also can enhance the __ for safety environment and protection against ecological stresses (such as droughts, floods and pests).
- Ecosystem services are determined by the interaction between __ and social systems, because only ecosystem processes that contribute to the fulfillment of human needs are ecosystem services.
Down
- Soil __ is the basis for many ecosystem services that people depend upon such as food and fiber.
- Further research on ecosystem services has led to the growth of fields such as environmental __, which investigates natural capital.
- The experience of __ is one of the examples of cultural ecosystem services.
- Instruments for assessing ecosystem services, including quantification, __ and modeling.
- The changes in ecosystem services will contribute to human well-being by providing basic material necessities (such as __ and building materials.
- In the case of coastal and estuarine ecosystems, regulating services include climate regulation, waste treatment and disease control and natural __ regulation.
- There are four ecosystem services including provisioning services, regulating services, __ services and cultural services.
- The consequences of human impact for biodiversity and ecosystem service delivery vary both qualitatively and __ depending on system properties and land-use intensities.
- __ may lead to increases in plant diversity as a consequence of increased habitat heterogeneity, but due to habitat fragmentation negatively affect species that rely on large habitats.
- __ services can be defined as the conditions and processes through which natural ecosystems, and the species that make them up, sustain, and fulfill human life.
- Landscape __ can reduce the natural pollination.
- Supporting services are the services that allow for the other ecosystem services to be present abd have __ impacts on humans that last over a long period of time.
20 Clues: Landscape __ can reduce the natural pollination. • The experience of __ is one of the examples of cultural ecosystem services. • Instruments for assessing ecosystem services, including quantification, __ and modeling. • Soil __ is the basis for many ecosystem services that people depend upon such as food and fiber. • ...
Chapter 17 The Progressive Era Review 2020-11-17
Across
- a leader who urged African Americans to demand their rights
- Novel that revealed unsanitary conditions in Chicago’s stockyards
- law that divided Native American reservations into smaller plots of land
- the United States President elected in 1912
- The _____________ Antitrust Act allowed workers to organize more freely.
- a movement by Walter Rauschenbusch that encouraged people to follow the Bible’s teachings to improve society
- house a community center that provided social services to the urban poor
- gave the federal government the power to decide where and how much water would be distributed
- Theodore Roosevelt’s program for fair government
- a movement that promoted the practice of never drinking alcohol
- President Roosevelt sided with the _________________ in a 1902 strike by threatening the owners with a federal takeover. It was the first time the federal government sided with workers in a labor dispute.
- opened Hull House in Chicago, inspiring other women to become social workers
- a movement that arose in the 1890s to address social problems
- an activist who opened the country’s first birth-control clinic
- provided federal agents to inspect meat sold across state lines and required inspection of meat processing-plants
Down
- legislation passed to control the safety of foods and medicines
- a change to the Constitution that gave Congress power to create an income tax
- Created because of the efforts of John Muir.
- born to a wealthy family and college educated. He worked hard to establish a tough image. The Republican party tried to “bury” him by making him Vice President. He got the last laugh.
- a man who led the Division of Forestry under President Theodore Roosevelt
- 1914 law that was passed to monitor business practices that might lead to monopoly
- an African American leader who urged hard work and patience in the pursuit of full citizenship rights
- a movement to teach immigrants to adopt white Protestant lifestyles
- an organization that worked for women’s suffrage
- a social activist and suffrage leader who formed the National Woman’s Party
- socially conscious writers who dramatized the need for reform
- a group that planned to use the courts to challenge laws that were unfair to African Americans
- passed in 1917, giving women the right to vote
- organization that helped poor African American families send their children to school
- organization committed to the protection of Jews against physical and verbal assault
30 Clues: the United States President elected in 1912 • Created because of the efforts of John Muir. • passed in 1917, giving women the right to vote • an organization that worked for women’s suffrage • Theodore Roosevelt’s program for fair government • a leader who urged African Americans to demand their rights • socially conscious writers who dramatized the need for reform • ...
Fast Food Nation: Crossword Puzzle - “What’s in the Meat?” 2023-11-09
Across
- Popular fast food in the US consisting of beef in a flattened cylinder, sandwiched between two halves of a bread thingie; the other way to fold paper (hotdog; vertical)
- Partial sterilization of a product, like milk, to make it safe for consumption
- Bacteria found in the intestine; causes food poisoning; caught through eating raw poultry, eggs, beef, and sometimes unwashed fruits and vegetables
- Meat that comes from cows
- Measures taken to ensure the quality and safety of businesses involved in handling food
- Acronym for the US Department of Agriculture that oversees farming, ranching, forestry, regulation of food quality, safety, and nutritional labeling, as well as food related social welfare programs
- Part of the slaughterhouse; the place where the animals are killed and processed
- The process by which food becomes spoiled or tainted with bacteria, parasites, or toxic substances
- Acronym for Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; in charge of protecting people from disease
- Also known as an abattoir; a facility that slaughters animals for their meat
- Multinational fast food chain, with golden arches as its logo
- Handles slaughtering, processing, packaging, and distributing meat
- Four legged mammal; commonly raised as livestock for milk and beef
- Illness caused by bacteria or other toxins in food, typically with vomiting and diarrhea
- A food safety process used to kill germs that cause food poisoning, through ionizing radiation
- The first-fast food hamburger chain; chose its name because of its association with cleanliness
Down
- Bought out by Tyson foods in the 1990s, this was a beef processor involved in the recall of over 25 million pounds of ground beef, what was, at the time, one of the largest recalls of food in the US
- Law passed in 1907 by Theodore Roosevelt to improve sanitation in factories, inspection of animals and meat, and correct labeling of food
- Bacteria found in the lower intestine; can cause serious, even fatal food poisoning; caught from infected animals or people
- Quickly and mass-produced food, usually considered unhealthy
- Illness that comes from eating contaminated food
- Lunches served at school
- Removing food from circulation in the market due to violation of US Food and Drug Administration regulation
- Acronym for Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point; analyzes and controls hazards posed toward raw materials, procurement, handling, manufacturing, distribution, and consumption
- Also known as Shiga toxin; found in some strains of E.coli
- Fast food chain; it's name comes from a wind-up toy that jump-scares children
- Bacterium, virus, or other microorganism that can cause disease
27 Clues: Lunches served at school • Meat that comes from cows • Illness that comes from eating contaminated food • Also known as Shiga toxin; found in some strains of E.coli • Quickly and mass-produced food, usually considered unhealthy • Multinational fast food chain, with golden arches as its logo • Bacterium, virus, or other microorganism that can cause disease • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- Can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Is a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
- A proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- Is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock.
- Is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilise when its supply of resources remains constant.
- Are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
Down
- Is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
- Meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- Is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
- Managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- The impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- Are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
- Is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- A social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
21 Clues: Can be defined broadly or narrowly. • Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- Can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Is a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
- A proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- Is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock.
- Is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilise when its supply of resources remains constant.
- Are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
Down
- Is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
- Meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- Is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
- Managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- The impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- Are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
- Is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- A social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
21 Clues: Can be defined broadly or narrowly. • Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. • ...
24HRFS1 2024-03-29
Across
- A relatively uniform area of vegetation within a forest, typically characterized by similar species composition and age structure.
- The application of scientific, economic, and social principles to the management and conservation of forest resources to achieve specific goals.
- The study of living organisms.
- A community of trees, shrubs, herbs, and associated organisms covering a considerable area, contributing to oxygen production, water retention, and soil nutrient cycling.
- The natural or accelerated wearing away of the land surface by wind, water, or other environmental factors, leading to soil loss and landscape changes.
- The act of maintaining something in its original or existing state, particularly with regard to natural environments or cultural heritage.
- The natural, three-dimensional layer of the earth's surface that supports plant growth, influenced by climate, living organisms, parent material, topography, and time.
- An association of plants and animals occupying a common environment and interacting with each other, forming interdependent relationships.
- A tall plant with a single main stem and a distinct crown of leaves, providing habitat, oxygen, and numerous other ecosystem services.
- The scientific study of trees, including their classification, identification, and ecological roles.
- The collection of forest or agricultural crops for commercial use or consumption.
Down
- Land owned and managed by governmental agencies for the benefit and use of the public.
- A unit of land measurement equal to the area of a square with sides of approximately 209 feet, often used in agricultural and land management contexts.
- Forested areas capable of sustaining significant timber production.
- Short plants with narrow leaves and hollow stems, often forming dominant vegetation in grassland ecosystems.
- Organisms that break down dead material into simpler substances, facilitating the recycling of nutrients in ecosystems.
- Wood that has been sawed or processed into planks or other standardized forms for construction or other purposes.
- A biome dominated by grasses and associated plants, found in areas with low precipitation or periodic droughts.
- The principles and practices for managing forests, including managing timber, fish, wildlife, range, and watersheds; protecting forest and timber products; harvesting, transporting, manufacturing, marketing, and preserving wood and other forest products; maintaining water and air quality; and ensuring societal well-being.
- Trees suitable for use in producing lumber or other wood products.
- A young tree that has recently germinated from a seed and begun to grow.
- Refers to forests that have developed over a long period without significant disturbance, often containing mature or ancient trees and diverse ecosystems.
- To cut and prepare tree segments for use in lumber and other products.
23 Clues: The study of living organisms. • Trees suitable for use in producing lumber or other wood products. • Forested areas capable of sustaining significant timber production. • To cut and prepare tree segments for use in lumber and other products. • A young tree that has recently germinated from a seed and begun to grow. • ...
What is Agriculture? 2024-08-18
Across
- fall from oak trees
- disease that can be transmitted from animals to humans
- contains lots of calcium
- a product brought into our country from another
- can be sweet or sour, is good for you
- last step in the 4 divisions of agriculture
- product sent out from our country to another
- equine
- the wearing away of soil by wind or water
- person who does most production
- on the cob or popped
- a natural resource that can be replaced
- plants grown in a field are called
- produce eggs, but are also eaten
- not a plant but an ______
- animal doctor
- place where bees live and honey is gathered
- deals with flowers, vegetables, and landscaping
- holds the plant upright
- temperature, rainfall, amount of sunlight
- helps farmers plant and harvest crops
- can be beef or dairy
- produced by chickens
- wood and cotton are examples
- shot to prevent disease
- first step in the 4 divisions
- favorite Virginia crop
- common VA wildlife species
- added to the soil to provide nutrients for plants
- dried grasses, eaten by cattle and horses
- place where an animal lives
- fiber crop, you wear it
Down
- the science of managing trees and wildlife habitat
- transporting products to the market
- 7-14 on the pH scale
- used to build houses and decks
- used to reproduce plants
- growing plants without soil
- have to mow it in the summer
- when _____ fly
- controversial crop, grown in many southern states
- second step in the 4 divisions
- grow underground, salted or plain
- evergreen tree, smells good
- plants and people need this to live
- term for reproducing plants
- green vegetable..we eat the stem and the flower
- plants grow from it, contains sand, silt, and clay
- part of the plant that draws water up
- poultry, alot of this is eaten in November
- produce honey
- dioxide. plants take this in and let out oxygen
- industry responsible for your food and clothing
- beef, pork, lamb
- business in agriculture
- cheese, yogurt, milk
- contains leaves, stems, and roots
- what a lumberjack yells
- someone who fixes tractors or vehicles
- fish production
- a hay _____
- made from wheat, sliced
- apples and peaches grow here
- using resources wisely
- meat from cattle
- underground area where water is held
66 Clues: equine • a hay _____ • produce honey • animal doctor • when _____ fly • fish production • beef, pork, lamb • meat from cattle • fall from oak trees • 7-14 on the pH scale • on the cob or popped • cheese, yogurt, milk • can be beef or dairy • produced by chickens • using resources wisely • favorite Virginia crop • business in agriculture • what a lumberjack yells • holds the plant upright • ...
Branches of science 2021-09-07
Across
- Study of cells.
- The practical application of science to commerce or industry
- The study of the mechanical, physical, and biochemical functions of living organisms
- Study of secret writing.
- Science and technology of electronic phenomena
- The branch of medicine dealing with the applications of radiant energy, including x-rays and radioisotopes
- The science of studying and managing forests and plantations, and related natural resources
- Study of fish.
- The science of matter and its interactions with energy and itself
- Communication between two minds at a distance with the help of emotions, thoughts and feelings.
- The study of human cultures both past and present. Study of apes and man.
- Deals with life or possibilities of life beyond the earth.
- The study of poisons and the effects of posisoning
- Study of virus.
- Deals with the study of blood vascular system.
- Study of heart.
- The study of animals Agronomy Science dealing with crop plant.
- The study of insects
- Science The systematic study of computing systems and computation
- Silk industry(culture of silk moth and pupa).
- Deals with the study of origin of new from old.
- Study of snakes.
- The study of climates and investigations of its phenomena and causes
Down
- Study of fruits.
- Study of skulls.
- Study of improvment of human race by applying laws of heredity. it is related with future generations.
- Study of cause of insects.
- Study concerning with the application and uses of very low temperature.
- Study of skin.
- Study of flower yeilding plants.
- The study of earthquakes and the movement of waves through the earth
- Study of the mind and behaviour
- Study of algae.
- The study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment
- The science of genes, heredity, and the variation of organisms Phonetics Concerning the sounds of a language.
- The science of classification of animals and plants
- The physics of energy, heat, work, entropy and the spontaneity of processes
- Natural phenomenon.
- Study of flower.
- Engineering The application of science, mathematics, and economics to the process of converting raw materials or chemicals into more useful or valuable forms
- The study of the behavior and properties of matter
- Science The science of the interactions between the physical, chemical, and biological components of the environment
- The study of the structure and organization of living things
- The scientific study of plant life
44 Clues: Study of skin. • Study of fish. • Study of cells. • Study of algae. • Study of virus. • Study of heart. • Study of fruits. • Study of skulls. • Study of flower. • Study of snakes. • Natural phenomenon. • The study of insects • Study of secret writing. • Study of cause of insects. • Study of the mind and behaviour • Study of flower yeilding plants. • The scientific study of plant life • ...
Edo - Industry, Cities, and Trade 2024-11-15
Across
- a kind of hotel for important people on the trade routes
- the study and action of managing money
- someone who goes to a shrine, temple, or church, for example
- what people do at a shrine, temple, or church, for example
- this was a hotel for regular people on the trade routes
- where the boats could load and unload their goods
- the money made of metal; gold or silver in the Edo era
- the industry of growing crops to sell for food
- the industry of catching fish or other seafood to sell for food
- things that are grown to be sold. NOT rice that was grown for taxes
- money, for example dollars or yen. In the past, also salt or rice.
- making pots or kettles from iron, usually to sell
- In Edo, Osaka, and Kyoto merchants made these groups - merchant guilds
- wooden plates or boxes or spoons painted with a kind of shiny paint
- the industry of making beer, sake, or soy sauce to sell
- a building where merchants kept goods before selling them
- the place where water meets land
- to make a rough thing cleaner or more pure, like iron ore to iron
- the name for the 5 land trade routes made in the Edo era
Down
- a kind of car that can be pulled by horses
- points on the trade routes where people would be checked by shogunate
- like “roads on the sea” for boats to carry large amounts of goods
- the number of people in a town, city, country, or other areas
- these started because of different currency in east and west of Japan
- this means “must be done”. If something is this, you must follow the rule
- land that was made from filling wet ground or the sea
- something that was made by hand, usually to sell
- dried seafood. For example: sea cucumber, abalone, and shark fin
- used to help food last longer. Also used as money.
- cloth or woven fabric or the clothes made from them.
- the industry of cutting down trees for wood to sell
- a kind of silver fish that can be dried easily
- this is the difference between the cost of buying and the cost of selling
- a tool that helps to dig in the soil to make it easier to plant seeds
34 Clues: the place where water meets land • the study and action of managing money • a kind of car that can be pulled by horses • the industry of growing crops to sell for food • a kind of silver fish that can be dried easily • something that was made by hand, usually to sell • where the boats could load and unload their goods • making pots or kettles from iron, usually to sell • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilise when its supply of resources remains constant.
- Meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- A social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
- Is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- Management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- The impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- Is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
- Is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- Range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
- Managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
Down
- Is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
- Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- Is a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock.
- Are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- A proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
21 Clues: Can be defined broadly or narrowly. • Is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. • ...
Wordlist unit 3 Allae Henna 2018-10-16
Across
- a stream of water that is forced up into the air through a small hole, especially for decorative effect, or the structure in a lake or pool from which this flows
- a tool, usually with a metal blade and a handle, used for cutting and spreading food or other substances, or as a weapon
- he measurement of something from end to end or along its longest side
- a tropical forest in which trees and plants grow very closely together
- to damage or injure
- If someone is given permission to do permissions something, they are allowed to do it
- someone who enjoys and looks for dangerous and exciting experiences
- he fact of an aircraft arriving on the ground or a boat reaching land
- a weapon that bullets or shells (= explosive containers) are fired from
- very frightened
- a journey in which you go somewhere, usually for a short time, and come back again
- unfriendly and not liking something
- the place something comes from or starts at, or the cause of something
- page a page of information on the internet about a particular subject, that forms (a part of) a website
Down
- the land next to or close to the sea
- a group of people, often of related families, who live together, sharing the same language, culture, and history, especially those who do not live in towns or cities
- landscape ful of trees
- a long, sharp tooth
- a person you spend a lot of time with often because you are friends or because you are travelling together
- A dangerous person, animal, thing, or activity could harm you
- a pill that you take to help you to sleep better
- to repair something that is broken or damaged
- an unusual, exciting, and possibly dangerous activity, such as a trip or experience, or the excitement produced by such an activity
- somebody who shows you around.
- the science of planting and taking care of large areas of trees
- to use your teeth to cut into something or someone
- a type of bed used especially outside, consisting of a net or long piece of strong cloth that you tie between two trees or poles so that it swings (= moves sideways through the air)
- an animal that lives in hot countries, has a long tail, and climbs trees. Monkeys are primates (= the group of animals that are most like humans)
28 Clues: very frightened • a long, sharp tooth • to damage or injure • landscape ful of trees • somebody who shows you around. • unfriendly and not liking something • the land next to or close to the sea • to repair something that is broken or damaged • a pill that you take to help you to sleep better • to use your teeth to cut into something or someone • ...
Geo Unit 6 Vocab review 2025-04-21
Across
- This occurs when the quantity demanded is greater than the quantity supplied.
- This is the cost of the next best use of your money or time when you choose to do one thing rather than another.
- These are economic activities that use natural resources directly from the earth. Examples include: Farming, Livestock grazing, Fishing, Forestry, Mining
- Economic system in which the decisions of what, how and for whom to produce are based on traditions or customs.
- Total market value of all final goods and services produced in a country during a single year.
- A nation’s land and all of the materials nature provides that can be used to make goods and services.
- Are the processing, management, and distribution of information. Examples include: Computers, Cellphones, Internet
- Use raw materials to make products that are more valuable than the original raw materials. Examples include: Cars, Furniture, Cellphones, Computers
- Individuals and businesses have the freedom to use their resources in ways they think best.
- Is a measure of how efficiently businesses use the factors of production to create products.
- System in which private citizens own most, if not all, of the means of production and decide how to use them within legal limits.
Down
- A nation’s way of producing and distributing things its people want and need.
- Four categories of resources to produce goods and services
- The study of how people choose to use their limited resources to satisfy their unlimited wants.
- To trade a good or service for another good or service.
- Involve providing goods and services to people and businesses. Examples include: Doctors, Teachers, Truck Drivers
- Economic system in which individuals and businesses are allowed to compete for profit with a minimum of government interference.
- A model showing how goods, services, resources, and money flow among sectors and markets in the American Economy.
- The material well-being of an individual, a group, or a nation as measured by how well needs and wants are satisfied.
- The government owns the majority of land, labor, and capital resources.
- An economic system that has elements of tradition, command, and markets that answer the WHAT, HOW, and FOR WHOM questions.
- Situation of not having enough resources to satisfy all of one’s wants and needs.
- An economic decision-making model that divides the total benefits by the total costs.
- The amount supplied by producers is greater than the amount demanded by consumers.
- A belief that the government should not interfere in the marketplace.
25 Clues: To trade a good or service for another good or service. • Four categories of resources to produce goods and services • A belief that the government should not interfere in the marketplace. • The government owns the majority of land, labor, and capital resources. • A nation’s way of producing and distributing things its people want and need. • ...
Enviromental Vocabulary words 2026-03-19
Across
- – Cultivation of a single crop over a large area.
- – Leaving one's country to live elsewhere.
- – Standard of health, comfort, and happiness.
- – Air pollution from smoke and fog.
- – Oxygen molecule protecting Earth from UV radiation.
- – Economic factors influencing supply and demand.
- – Average number of children born per woman.
- – Transformation of fertile land into desert.
- – Variety of living species in an area.
- – Extraction of minerals and resources from the earth.
- – Spread of urban development into rural areas.
- – Relationship between product availability and consumer desire.
- – Removal of salt from seawater for drinking or irrigation.
- – Number of deaths per 1,000 people annually.
- – Organisms genetically engineered for specific traits.
- – Ability to reproduce; number of offspring produced.
- – Per person; average per individual.
- – Study of resource allocation, production, and consumption.
- – Cleaning used water before releasing or reusing it.
- – Excessive nutrients in water, causing plant growth and oxygen depletion.
- – Number of births per 1,000 people annually.
- – Substance that contaminates air, water, or soil.
- – Diseases spread through the air.
- – Using resources so they remain available for the future.
- – Build-up of toxins in organisms higher up the food chain.
Down
- – Measure of human demand on natural resources.
- – Diseases spread through contaminated water.
- – Management and care of forests.
- – Materials or assets used to meet needs.
- – A group of people sharing culture and institutions.
- – Increased agricultural output due to new technologies.
- – Warming caused by gases trapping heat in the atmosphere.
- – Methods for manipulating genetic material.
- – Catching fish for food or recreation.
- – Total value of a country’s goods and services, including overseas earnings.
- – Introduction of harmful substances into the environment.
- – Growth of cities as people move from rural areas.
- – Raising livestock, such as cattle or sheep.
- – Increase in number of people in a population.
- – Illnesses caused by fungi.
- – Reduction of ozone in the atmosphere, increasing UV exposure.
- – Processes to make water safe for consumption.
- – Tools and methods used in healthcare.
- – Sudden, large deaths of fish in a water body.
- – Growing crops and raising animals for food and resources.
- – Principles of right and wrong behavior.
- – Changes in population birth and death rates as a society develops.
- – To make steady or prevent sudden changes.
- – Moving into a country to live there permanently.
- – Long-term shifts in Earth’s climate patterns.
- – Related to education or scholarly activities.
- – Rain made acidic by pollutants, harming environments.
52 Clues: – Illnesses caused by fungi. • – Management and care of forests. • – Diseases spread through the air. • – Air pollution from smoke and fog. • – Per person; average per individual. • – Catching fish for food or recreation. • – Variety of living species in an area. • – Tools and methods used in healthcare. • – Materials or assets used to meet needs. • ...
Natural Resources 2025-11-26
Across
- The unwanted fish, animals, or marine species caught during commercial fishing.
- Mining method involving the large-scale excavation of land to create a hole with descending steps.
- A climate factor measuring the accumulation of warmth above 5°C, crucial for planting crops.
- The service sector of the economy, including banking, tourism, and education.
- The practice of removing more fish than a fish stock can naturally reproduce.
- Services focused on information management, research, and high-level consulting.
- Goods or services brought into a country from abroad for sale.
- Goods or services produced in one country and sold to another.
- The layer of rock or soil that must be removed in surface mining to access the ore.
- The primary oil recovery method used for deeply buried bitumen that cannot be strip-mined.
- A tax or duty to be paid on a particular class of imports or exports.
- The heavy, black, viscous crude oil substance found in the oil sands.
- Forestry method where all trees are removed from an area; yields the highest commercial return.
- High-level decision-making and top executives in government, science, and industry.
- The total value of all finished goods and services produced within a country's borders.
- INDUSTRY The sector of the economy that extracts raw materials from the natural environment.
Down
- The process of making goods, especially on a large scale using machinery.
- A raw material or agricultural product that can be bought and sold.
- The final stage of the In-Situ extraction process, where crude bitumen is converted into synthetic crude oil.
- The farming method of raising aquatic organisms under controlled conditions.
- A forest harvesting method where only mature or selected high-value trees are taken.
- MATERIAL A basic substance used in the production of goods.
- The level an organism occupies in a food chain (e.g., producer, consumer).
- Mining Type of mining used for horizontal deposits like coal, often involving long trenches.
- TRADE nInternational commerce with minimal or no government restrictions, tariffs, or quotas.
- Farming method characterized by large land area and low output per unit of land.
- Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising future generations.
- The specific region in Alberta where the majority of Canadian oil sands are located.
- INDUSTRY The sector of the economy that processes and manufactures raw materials into finished goods.
- The maximum population of a given species that a habitat can sustain indefinitely.
30 Clues: MATERIAL A basic substance used in the production of goods. • Goods or services brought into a country from abroad for sale. • Goods or services produced in one country and sold to another. • A raw material or agricultural product that can be bought and sold. • A tax or duty to be paid on a particular class of imports or exports. • ...
Crossword Puzzle 2020-05-22
Across
- which influences spiritual practices and beliefs
- A class of feudal lords that were vassals to the Emperor
- A Japanese art movement that was prevalent throughout the 17th and 19th century, who’s artists mainly produced woodblock prints
- A type of cereal grain that is a staple food of people throughout Asia and Africa
- An alcoholic beverage produced through the fermentation of rice
- A polytheistic religion, originating in Japan sometime in 300 BCE
- A type of sea vegetable that is grouped into several kinds of algae
- A period in Japanese history that lasted from 1336 CE to 1573 CE (also referred to as Ashikaga period)
- A type of Japanese dance-drama that is known for its elaborate makeup and costumes
- The former name for the Japanese city, Tokyo
- Ceremony A form of ritual tea making practised in countries throughout East Asia such as China, Japan and Korea
- A person who is involved in trade, especially one who deals with foreign countries or supplying goods in a particular field
- A period in Japanese history that lasted from 794 CE to 1185 CE
- The term for a school of Mahāyāna Buddhism that originated in China during the Teng Dynasty that is now prevalent in Japan
- A type of Japanese noodle made from buckwheat
- Meaning townsperson; a class during the beginning of the Tokugawa period
Down
- A form of traditional Japanese puppetry that originated in Osaka in the 17th century
- A series of hard (and possibly shiny) applied to wood and metal products
- An evergreen flowering plant that is in the Poaceae grass family
- A type of traditional paper-folding art associated with Japanese culture
- The science of cultivating, using and repairing forests
- A religion that mostly entails interpretation of the teachings of the
- A short-form genre of Japanese poetry that is characterised by its 5’7 5 syllable structure
- A dense, soft chemical element known for its yellow colouration
- A worker who is skilled in a particular field
- A chemical element that has a soft, white, colouration and is a transition metal
- A Japanese genre of collaborative poetry that consisted of a minimum of two stanzas
- A type of dance-drama theatre that is characterised by its use of masks and stylised gestures to convey a character’s age, gender or whether they are a spirit
- A traditional Japanese instrument that has three strings
- A samurai without a lord or master either because of death or because they lost the favour of their
30 Clues: The former name for the Japanese city, Tokyo • A worker who is skilled in a particular field • A type of Japanese noodle made from buckwheat • which influences spiritual practices and beliefs • The science of cultivating, using and repairing forests • A class of feudal lords that were vassals to the Emperor • A traditional Japanese instrument that has three strings • ...
Southeast Asia 2020-10-25
Across
- Involves large areas of land and minimal labor input per hectare.
- Operated by paid employees of the state.
- Removing nonrenewable metallic and non metallic minerals like mining and quarrying.
- Farmers producing for off-farm sales who apply large amounts of capital and labor per unit of land engage in this.
- The clustering of productive activities and people for mutual advantage.
- Producers or agents freely market their goods and serves, the laws of supply and demand determine the price and supply.
- Shorthand reference to a complex of seed and management improvements.
- The planning mechanism created to achieve such economic development.
- those that harvest or extract something from the Earth.
- Accrue in the form of savings from shared transport facilities, transport facilities, social services etc.
- Involves the cultivation of small land holdings through the expenditure of great amounts of labor per acre.
- Unpaid members lost their own land and joined brigades of other workers assigned specific tasks during the crop year.
- Study of how people earn their living, how livelihood systems vary by area, and how economic activities are spatially interrelated and linked.
- Goods and services are created for the use of the producers and their kinship groups.
- Typified by large wheat farms and livestock ranching.
- Consist of those business and labor specializations that provide services.
Down
- Private firms that have established branch operations in nations foreign to their headquarters country.
- Farmers hack down the natural vegetation, burn the cuttings, and then plant crops.
- Producers or their agents disposed of goods and services through government agencies that controlled both supply and price.
- those that add value to materials by changing their form.
- Largest volume or rate of use that will not impair its ability to be renewed or to maintain the same future productivity.
- Results involving the model that was created.
- Wandering, but controlled movement of livestock.
- Based on harvesting the natural bounty of renewable resources, through ones in serious danger of depletion through over exploitation like fishing and forestry.
- Introduction of a foreign element-investment, management, and marketing.
- Tells us that areas tend to specialize in the production of those items for which they have the greatest relative advantage over other areas.
- Applied to fourth class of economic activities.
- Proposed by the German location economist Alfred Weber.
- Subdivide their total costs into categories.
29 Clues: Operated by paid employees of the state. • Subdivide their total costs into categories. • Results involving the model that was created. • Applied to fourth class of economic activities. • Wandering, but controlled movement of livestock. • Typified by large wheat farms and livestock ranching. • Proposed by the German location economist Alfred Weber. • ...
Groups 2022-04-20
Across
- form of government characterized by a single leader or group of leaders that hold government power promised to the people
- market structure in which a market or industry is dominated by a small number of large sellers or producers.
- are governments in which a collection of individuals rules over a nation.
- members of a corporate board of directors serving on the boards of multiple corporations.
- mother or a female elder has absolute authority over the family group
- a family consisting of a couple and their children from this and all previous relationships.
- a legal form is typically defined as a joint stock company
- any industry involved in the extraction and production of raw materials, such as farming, logging, hunting, fishing, forestry and mining.
- the ability to control the behavior of others
- the manufacturing of goods in the economy, including the processing of materials produced by the primary sector.
- a number of different things or parts that are put or grouped together to form a whole but remain distinct entities.
- exclusive possession or control of the supply of or trade in a commodity or service.
- is an economic system in which private individuals or businesses own capital goods.
- corporate organization that owns and controls the production of goods or services in at least one country other than its home country.
Down
- a couple and their dependent children, regarded as a basic social unit.
- another word for a job
- father or a male elder has absolute authority over the family group
- elite a unified group of military, corporate, and government leaders
- communication within different societies and people
- a market system of resource allocation, commerce, and trade in which free markets coexist with government intervention.
- relating to or believing in the principle that all people are equal and deserve equal rights and opportunities.
- an occupational structure composed of smaller, less profitable firms
- a family that extends beyond the nuclear family
- societies or governments organize and distribute available resources, services, and goods across a geographic region or country.
- an unregulated system of economic exchange, in which taxes, quality controls, quotas, tariffs, and other forms of centralized economic interventions by government either do not exist or are minimal.
- power system that appoints a person as head of state for life or until abdication.
- the sector of the economy that concerns services.
- authoritarian form of government in which the ruling party recognizes no limitations whatsoever on its power, including in its citizens' lives or rights.
- power accepted as legitimate by those subject to it
29 Clues: another word for a job • the ability to control the behavior of others • a family that extends beyond the nuclear family • the sector of the economy that concerns services. • communication within different societies and people • power accepted as legitimate by those subject to it • a legal form is typically defined as a joint stock company • ...
revision 2024-11-25
Across
- , What primary activity involves managing forests for timber production?
- Industry , What type of industry involves large,scale production, often of heavy goods like steel and machinery?
- , What is the tidal mouth of a river where it meets the sea called?
- , What is a bend or curve in a river called?
- , What is the flat area of land on either side of a river that is prone to flooding called?
- , What is the fertile soil deposited by a river called?
- , What type of company operates in multiple countries?
- , What is the process by which the river wears away the land called?
- , What is the term for selling goods and services to another country?
- , What are the particles of rock and soil carried and deposited by a river called?
- , What is the side of a river called?
- , What is the overflow of water onto normally dry land called?
- , What is the natural or artificial embankment built along the sides of a river to prevent flooding called?
- , What is the process by which the river's load is broken down into smaller, rounder particles called?
Down
- , What is the practice of farming, including cultivation of the soil and rearing animals called?
- , What is the path through which a river flows called?
- , What is the term for buying goods and services from another country?
- Action , What is the process by which the force of moving water erodes the riverbed and banks called?
- , What is the process of extracting minerals from the earth called?
- Industry , What type of industry can locate anywhere without significant impact from resources or transport costs?
- Resources , What are natural resources that cannot be replenished once used called?
- , What is the extraction of stone, sand, and other materials from the earth called?
- , What is the process by which soluble materials are dissolved in the water and carried along called?
- Industry , What type of industry involves small,scale production, often of consumer goods?
- , What is the process by which the river's load scrapes against the bed and banks, causing erosion called?
- Sector , What is the sector of the economy that involves extraction and harvesting of natural resources?
- Resources , What are natural resources that can be replenished over time called?
- , What primary activity involves catching fish and other seafood?
- , What is the process by which a river lays down sediment called?
- , What is the landform created at the mouth of a river where it deposits sediment called?
30 Clues: , What is the side of a river called? • , What is a bend or curve in a river called? • , What is the path through which a river flows called? • , What type of company operates in multiple countries? • , What is the fertile soil deposited by a river called? • , What is the overflow of water onto normally dry land called? • ...
timber industry 2025-10-14
Across
- wood that has been cut into rough planks, beams, or boards for use in construction or carpentry.
- a piece of heavy equipment responsible for moving logs or processed lumber.
- a large, oven-like chamber used to dry wood by controlling temperature, humidity, and airflow to a specific moisture content.
- chainsaw milling, a process where a chainsaw is used with a special frame to cut logs into planks or boards.
- a large, heavy-duty vehicle used to transport logs from a forest to a processing plant, or finished lumber from a mill to a lumber yard or construction site.
- a heavy, specialized machine that fells trees and processes them into specific lengths for lumber products, often in a single operation.
- the unprocessed, rough-cut trunks of trees that are the source material for making lumber.
- a gardening tool for creating clean lawn borders, a person who finishes an edge on a garment or other item, a machine for trimming or finishing edges, and other specialized tools for tasks like sanding floors or processing lumber.
- a logging machine that hauls logs using cables and winches.
- a piece of wood, metal, or some other material having one thick end and tapering to a thin edge, that is driven between two objects or parts of an object to secure or separate them.
Down
- the living or felled plants that are the raw source for lumber.
- a power tool with a long, sharp, continuous blade made of a toothed metal band stretched between two or more wheels, designed to cut various materials like wood, metal, and plastic.
- a factory in which logs are sawed into lumber by machine.
- a woodworking tool that smooths and flattens lumber to a uniform thickness by shaving off layers of wood.
- a specialized, heavy-duty machine that efficiently transforms felled trees into logs of a specific length and condition.
- an indentation or incision on an edge or surface.
- saw a power saw with a rapidly rotating toothed disk.
- a heavy-duty forestry vehicle that transports processed logs from the felling site to a roadside landing where they can be loaded onto trucks.
- a movable joint or mechanism on which a door, gate, or lid swings as it opens and closes or which connects linked objects.
- a heavy-duty tractor used in logging to drag logs from where they were cut to a landing site.
20 Clues: an indentation or incision on an edge or surface. • saw a power saw with a rapidly rotating toothed disk. • a factory in which logs are sawed into lumber by machine. • a logging machine that hauls logs using cables and winches. • the living or felled plants that are the raw source for lumber. • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Buffer Strips, are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- Farming, management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- Capacity, is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilize when its supply of resources remains constant.
- range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Tillage, is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- Farming, relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. Ecological Footprint, the impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
Down
- a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- Farming, is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
- Agriculture, are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
- a social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
- Management, a proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Management, managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- Agriculture, is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Development, meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- Sequestration, is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
20 Clues: can be defined broadly or narrowly. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Agriculture, is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards. • ...
Sustainable Agriculture 2020-09-08
Across
- Buffer Strips, are areas or strips of land maintained in permanent vegetation, designed to intercept pollutants and erosion.
- Farming, management strategy that employs detailed, site-specific information to precisely manage production inputs.
- Capacity, is the theoretical equilibrium population size at which a particular population in a particular environment will stabilize when its supply of resources remains constant.
- range of preventive tactics and biological controls to keep pest population within acceptable limits.
- Tillage, is a term that covers a broad range of soil tillage systems that leave residue cover on the soil surface, substantially reducing the effects of soil erosion from wind and water.
- is a set of design principles centred on whole systems thinking, simulating, or directly utilising the patterns and resilient features observed in natural ecosystems.
- Farming, relies on pasture or rangeland to supply the protein and energy requirements of livestock. Ecological Footprint, the impact of a person or community on the environment, expressed as the amount of land required to sustain their use of natural resources.
- is the sum total of all the plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms in the world, or in a particular area; all of their individual variation; and all the interactions between them.
Down
- a broad area of biology, involving the use of living systems and organisms to develop or make products. Depending on the tools and applications, it often overlaps with related scientific fields.
- Farming, is an agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction too rapidly changing farming practices.
- Agriculture, are certain herbal preparations that guide the decomposition processes in manures and compost.
- a social or political movement designed to bring about land reforms or to improve the economic status of the farmer.
- benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services.
- Management, a proven, whole farm/whole system approach to resource management that incorporates financial planning, land planning, grazing planning and biological monitoring.
- can be defined broadly or narrowly.
- Management, managing the amount, source, placement, form, and timing of the application of nutrients and soil amendments to ensure adequate soil fertility for plant production and to minimise the potential for environmental degradation, particularly water quality impairment.
- Agriculture, is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems.
- A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards.
- Development, meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
- Sequestration, is the process through which agricultural and forestry practices remove carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere.
20 Clues: can be defined broadly or narrowly. • benefits or costs that are not included in the market price of goods or services. • Agriculture, is a conservation and rehabilitation approach to food and farming systems. • A seal or logo indicating that a product has met a set of environmental or social standards. • ...
biodiversity 2025-05-15
Across
- Gradual change in the genetic makeup of a population over time
- A species at risk of extinction
- Excessive use
- The study of the relationships between organisms and their environment
- Species that is not native to a specific location
- Relating to the ideas, customs, and social behaviour of a society
- People at a local level, rather than at the center of major political activity
- The action of protecting or conserving something
- Reducing the severity of something
- Existing in or caused by nature; not made or caused by people
- The process of restoring to a former condition
- The natural environment where an organism lives
- The science and practice of managing forests
- The process of dealing with or controlling things or people
- A species occurring outside its natural range
- Capable of being renewed or replaced
- Materials that can be used to satisfy needs
- The surroundings or conditions in which a person, animal, or plant lives
- The effect of something
- The process of growth or improvement
- The state of being diverse
- An area with a high concentration of endemic species and under threat
- A species whose presence, absence, or abundance reflects environmental conditions
- Of, found in, or produced by the sea
- At risk of becoming endangered
- The gradual change in the composition of a community over time
Down
- The diversity of life in all its forms
- Originating or occurring naturally in a particular place; native
- A complete list of items
- Actions taken to achieve a particular end
- The action of returning something to its former condition
- A plan of action designed to achieve a long-term or overall aim
- A community of interacting organisms and their environment
- The state of having a variety of something
- The long-term pattern of weather in a particular area
- The business of providing services to tourists
- The complete disappearance of a species
- Fair and impartial
- The part of the earth's surface that is not covered by water
- The presence of harmful substances in the environment
- The assistance and advice provided by an ecosystem
- The process of dividing a habitat into smaller, isolated parts
- An individual living thing
- The action of defending something
- The process of decline in the quality of something
- The management of human use of nature for sustainability
- Meeting the needs of the present without compromising the future
- Observing and checking the progress or quality of something over a period of time
- A group of organisms capable of interbreeding
- Relating to genes or heredity
50 Clues: Excessive use • Fair and impartial • The effect of something • A complete list of items • An individual living thing • The state of being diverse • Relating to genes or heredity • At risk of becoming endangered • A species at risk of extinction • The action of defending something • Reducing the severity of something • Capable of being renewed or replaced • ...
JPL 2022-03-15
Across
- Ano ang baril na ginamit ng pag babarilin si JPL
- Tungkulin tinanggap ni sotero
- Saan matatagpuan ang manila south high school
- Hidalgo ANG NAPANGASAWA NI JPL
- six, nineteenfiftynine Kelan namatay SI JPL
- Saan nag tapos si sotero ng doctor cilaw
- sino ang panganay na anak ni JPL
- OF THE PHILIPPNES Anong paaralan binigyan si JPL ng law degree\
- Ano ang ikinamatay ni JPL
- Sino ang hindi pumayag na mag bitiw si JPL sa tungkulin nya
- KELAN SYA ENELECT SA PHILIPPINE SENATE
- P. Laurel BUUIN ANG PANGALAN NA JPL
- Anong taon nasangkot sa isang kaso si JPL
- ILAN ANG NAGING ANAK NI JPL
- Ano kulay ang laging soot na kurbata ni JPL
- Mag kano ang nagging sahod nung nag tratrabaho sya sa klerk sa bureau of forestry ng 18 taon sya
- Ang pangalan ng ina ni JPL
- Ano ang kahulugan ng laurel
- 9, 1911 PINAKASAL SI JPL
- Ano ang itinalaga ni quezon kay JPL
- Sino ang pinuntahan ni laurel sa Tokyo upang mag report
- Saan nag aral si JPL nung 15 taon lang sya
- Kelan nag retired si JPL bilang taga silbi sa Philippines.
- ANONG PANGALAN NG PAARALAN NA BINIGYTAN SI JPL NG MASTER OF LAW
Down
- Kelan nagin sekretaryo ng katarungan si laurel
- Sino ang ama ni Ruperto at sotero laurel
- Anong petsya namatay si wood
- kelan na talo si jpl sa re eleksyon nya dahil sap ag alis ng suporta ng simbahan sakanya
- Saan nag turo si JPL ng asignaturang English
- Ilang bala ang tumama kay JPL nung binaril sya
- thirty Kelan sila dumating sa tokyou
- Nakamana sa kanyan ninuno ng katapangan hindi mapagtimpiany katauhan
- naging miyembro siya ng Philippine constitutional Convention
- Anong pangalan ng ama ni JPL
- sino ang tumalo kay JPL sa re eleksyon
- ANONG YEAR PRINOMOTE SI JPL BILANG SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
- Jose P. Laurel ancestral house ay matatagpuan sa
- Ano ang nagging sakit ni WOOD
- saan inilipat si jpl nung nawala na sya sa departamento
- ILAN ANG ANAK NA LALAKE NI JPL
- Sino ang naging unang guro ni JPL at iba pa neto kapatid
- ILAN ANG ANAK NYA NA BABAE
- Sino ang tumulong kay JPL para Manalo sa kaso nya
- Ilan ang isinakdal kay JPL
- Ilang karat na kwintas na ginto ang hinandog kay JPL
- War II JPL nagging pangulo ng 2nd Republic of the Philippines noong digmaan ng.
- Nag layag patungong hilaga dahil sa hilig nito sa abentura
- Ito ay lihim na sosyedad ni sotero at marcelo
- Saan Nanirahan si Gat masungit nag sisimula ito sa letrang T
- NINE EIGHTEEN NINETYONE Kelan pinanganak si JPL
50 Clues: 9, 1911 PINAKASAL SI JPL • Ano ang ikinamatay ni JPL • ILAN ANG ANAK NYA NA BABAE • Ilan ang isinakdal kay JPL • Ang pangalan ng ina ni JPL • ILAN ANG NAGING ANAK NI JPL • Ano ang kahulugan ng laurel • Anong petsya namatay si wood • Anong pangalan ng ama ni JPL • Tungkulin tinanggap ni sotero • Ano ang nagging sakit ni WOOD • Hidalgo ANG NAPANGASAWA NI JPL • ...
Unit 5 review 2022-04-22
Across
- a public school offering special instruction and programs not available elsewhere, designed to attract a more diverse student body from throughout a school district.
- formal organizations, typically created through acquisitions or mergers and serve to diversify risk.
- society in which male members have more social and political power than female members.
- a family that extends beyond the nuclear family, including grandparents, aunts, uncles, and other relatives.
- government by the people
- the linkage between corporations that result when an individual serves on the board of directors of two companies
- An economic system based on market competition and the pursuit of profit, in which the means of production or capital are privately owned by individuals or corporations.
- a family, group, or government controlled by a woman or a group of women.
- small group of people who control a disproportionate amount of power, wealth, and privilege and access to decision-makers in a political system
- a form of government that attempts to assert total control over the lives of its citizens.
- the act of employing or state of being employed
- familial decision making power. is shared equally among participants in an ongoing activity
- ability to influence the behavior of others with or without resistance
- any industry involved in the extraction and production of raw materials, such as farming, logging, hunting, fishing, forestry and mining.
Down
- the lens through which a person views the world.
- systematic process in which someone designs the educating experiences.
- assumes that if every individual is exposed to the very same sets of instructional conditions, they all know the same
- consisting of an individual, his or her spouse, and their children
- when you and your partner make a life together with the children from one or both of your previous relationships.
- unregulated system of economic exchange, in which taxes, quality controls, quotas, tariffs, and other forms of centralized economic interventions by government either do not exist or are minimal.
- one in which many different groups and political parties are allowed to exist.
- covers the manufacturing of goods in the economy, including the processing of materials produced by the primary sector.
- part of a government department which is responsible for one particular thing.
- social integration, establishing relationships, and conformity to peer norms.
- political and economic system in which property and the means of production are owned in common, typically controlled by the state or government.
- a form of government in which one person or a small group possesses absolute power without effective constitutional limitations.
- the concept that the state alone has the right to use or authorize the use of physical force.
- power perceived as legitimate by the social structure.
- the concept that the state alone has the right to use or authorize the use of physical force.
29 Clues: government by the people • the act of employing or state of being employed • the lens through which a person views the world. • power perceived as legitimate by the social structure. • consisting of an individual, his or her spouse, and their children • systematic process in which someone designs the educating experiences. • ...
Agricultural and forestry activity in Bolivia 2025-06-12
4 Clues: It is harvested from the amazon forest. • Their main crops are potatoes, quinoa and barely • pollution It is one of the main problems for the health • This activity represents one of the main economic incomes in Bolivia
S.O. Unit 3 Vocabulary 2018-01-22
Across
- the land next to or close to the sea
- a tropical forest in which trees and plants grow very closely together
- a line of words printed in large letters as the title of a story in a newspaper
- a journey in which you go somewhere, usually for a short time, and come back again
- someone who enjoys and looks for dangerous and exciting experiences
- to use your teeth to cut into something or someone
- page a page of information on the internet about a particular subject
- a stream of water that is forced up into the air through a small hole, especially for decorative effect
- unfriendly and not liking something
- the science of planting and taking care of large areas of trees
- A dangerous person, animal, thing, or activity could harm you
- a large area of land covered with trees and plants, usually larger than a wood
- people who steal
- a person you spend a lot of time with often because you are friends or because you are travelling together
- illegal activities
- an animal that lives in hot countries, has a long tail, and climbs trees
- hurt or physically harmed
- to repair something that is broken or damaged
- to refuse to continue working because of an argument with an employer
Down
- to defeat or do better than
- the place something comes from or starts at
- the measurement of something from end to end or along its longest side
- weapons that bullets are fired from
- to arrive on the ground after moving down through the air
- a container for holding flowers or for decoration
- an unusual, exciting, and possibly dangerous activity, such as a trip or experience
- when you are allowed to do something by someone else
- a group of people, often of related families, who live together, sharing the same language, culture, and history
- the crime of stealing from somewhere or someone
- very scared
- taking something that belongs to someone else and keeping it
- a type of bed used outsidethat you tie between two trees or poles so that it swings
- a reptile with a long body and no legs
- to break up into pieces violently
- to store sounds or moving pictures using electronic equipment so that they can be heard or seen later
- long, sharp teeth
- a tool, usually with a metal blade and a handle, used for cutting and spreading food, or as a weapon
- a person whose job is showing a place or a route to visitors
38 Clues: very scared • people who steal • long, sharp teeth • illegal activities • hurt or physically harmed • to defeat or do better than • to break up into pieces violently • weapons that bullets are fired from • unfriendly and not liking something • the land next to or close to the sea • a reptile with a long body and no legs • the place something comes from or starts at • ...
Agrobiodiversity 2022-10-10
Across
- sistems – A complex interrelated matrix of soil, plants ,animals, implements, power, labor, capital and other inputs controlled in part by farming families and influenced to varying degrees by political, economic, institutional and social forces that operate at many levels.
- - Development opportunity crops.
- - A chemical used in agriculture, such as a pesticide or a fertilizer.
- Millet cientific name – Panicum miliaceum
- - A cultivated plant that is grown as food, especially a grain, fruit, or vegetable.
- - Key staple crop -
- - Key staple crop -
- - The capacity to recover quickly from difficulties; toughness.
- - All the animals that live wild in a particular area
- - The concentration of human populations into discrete areas. This concentration leads to the transformation of land for residential, commercial, industrial and transportation purposes.
- - The fact of becoming more diverse.
- - A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment.
- - Key staple crop -
- - Represents a more precisely defined group of plants, selected from within a species, with a common set of characteristics.
- - The interaction or cooperation of two or more organizations, substances, or other agents to produce a combined effect greater than the sum of their separate effects.
Down
- - The science or practice of farming, including cultivation of the soil for the growing of crops and the rearing of animals to provide food, wool, and other products.
- scientific name – Digitaria exilis
- - Non-timber forest products -
- - Refers to the second part of a plant's botanical name.
- - The act of protecting Earth's natural resources for current and future generations-
- Revolution - A large increase in crop production in developing countries achieved by the use of fertilizers, pesticides, and high-yield crop varieties.
- change - Long-term change in the average weather patterns that have come to define Earth's local, regional and global climates.
- - Voidance of the depletion of natural resources in order to maintain an ecological balance with social responsibility.
- use - Describe the human use of land. It represents the economic and cultural activities
- - An insect that carries pollen from one plant or part of a plant to another.
- - The variety and variability of animals, plants and micro-organisms that are used directly or indirectly for food and agriculture, including crops, livestock, forestry and fisheries.
- prodduction - The strategy with sensitivity to place and scale in order to sustain local communities and provide new job opportunities while preserving the quality of the environment.
- degradation - Is the physical, chemical and biological decline in soil quality.
- security - The state of having reliable access to a sufficient quantity of affordable, nutritious food.
- diversification - Taking a variety of nutrients in your diet.
30 Clues: - Key staple crop - • - Key staple crop - • - Key staple crop - • - Non-timber forest products - • - Development opportunity crops. • scientific name – Digitaria exilis • - The fact of becoming more diverse. • Millet cientific name – Panicum miliaceum • - All the animals that live wild in a particular area • - Refers to the second part of a plant's botanical name. • ...
Feeding the world - definitions 2024-04-11
Across
- substances that are used to control pests. They include herbicides, insecticides, nematicides, fungicides.
- genetically modified organism which has been modified by humans (e.g. through artificial selection or genetic engineering)
- widespread scarcity of food, caused by several possible factors, including war, natural disasters, crop failure, widespread poverty, an economic catastrophe or government policies.
- process of changing from working largely or exclusively by hand or with animals to doing that work with machinery
- food production system that couples aquaculture (raising aquatic animals such as fish, crayfish, snails or prawns in tanks) with hydroponics (cultivating plants in water) whereby the nutrient-rich aquaculture water is fed to hydroponically grown plants.
- occurs when an organism gets too few or too many nutrients, resulting in health problems
- crop and livestock production, aquaculture, fisheries, and forestry for food and non-food products. Started with the neolithic revolution.
- agriculture an agricultural production system characterised by the considerable use of. It seeks to produce as much as possible by optimising the labour force, the soil or other means of production.
- artificially adding water to plants
- ...farming: agricultural activity that is limited to self-consumption (also known as traditional farming)
- variety and variability of life on Earth (genetic, species and ecosystems)
- purposeful clearing of forested land.
Down
- land degradation of fertile land into arid desert due to a combination of natural processes and human activities
- period of technology transfer initiatives that saw greatly increased crop yields. These changes in agriculture began in developed countries in the early 20th century and spread globally till the late 1980s.
- the condition of not eating enough food to continue to be in good health.
- ...farming: agricultural activity to be resold on the market
- the quantity of product harvested on a given cultivated surface
- input to avoid fungi in agriculture
- ...cultivation: agricultural system in which plots of land are cultivated temporarily, then abandoned while post-disturbance fallow vegetation is allowed to freely grow while the cultivator moves on to another plot
- trade: arrangement designed to help producers in developing countries achieve sustainable and equitable trade relationships
- medical condition, sometimes considered a disease, in which excess body fat has accumulated to such an extent that it can potentially have negative effects on health.
- farming an agricultural production system that uses resources that are naturally present on the site. It is practised generally over large areas, with relatively low yield per hectare. To increase production, farmers increases the area of cultivated land. Mostly found in developing and poor countries or in neglected rural areas of developed countries.
- from outside: fertilizers, pesticides, etc.
- specialised agriculture for ‘exotic’ products sold in the global north such as bananas, coffee and cocoa.
24 Clues: input to avoid fungi in agriculture • artificially adding water to plants • purposeful clearing of forested land. • from outside: fertilizers, pesticides, etc. • ...farming: agricultural activity to be resold on the market • the quantity of product harvested on a given cultivated surface • the condition of not eating enough food to continue to be in good health. • ...
IW 2023-04-18
Across
- Is a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country.
- An economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful.
- Economic activity is divided into sectors, with each sector representing a different type of activity.
- Is the movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities.
- Was a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors,
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it.
- Is one that has little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living.
- An economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency.
- The practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry.
Down
- Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce
- An economic system in which the government controls the means of production, such as land, labor, and machinery.
- Shares characteristics of a group of people.
- Sector includes service industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- Is an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country.
- Is the part that makes direct use of natural resources. It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory.
- An economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies.
- located in the Middle East, North Africa, and South America, agreed to work together to control worldwide prices for oil.
- Developed countries often have a high gross domestic product, which is the total value of goods and services sold during a period of time,
- India's large and popular movie industry.
- Policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country, with a group of countries, or with specific businesses or individuals.
- The search for safety, food, and shelter has resulted in the migration, or mass movement, of people from one part of the world to another.
- The act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently.
- Refers to people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them.
- The underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location.
- The process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers.
26 Clues: India's large and popular movie industry. • Shares characteristics of a group of people. • The practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry. • Is a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country. • Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce • ...
IW 2023-04-20
Across
- The act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently.
- An economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful.
- Was a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors,
- India's large and popular movie industry.
- Is the movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities.
- Is a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country.
- located in the Middle East, North Africa, and South America, agreed to work together to control worldwide prices for oil.
- Developed countries often have a high gross domestic product, which is the total value of goods and services sold during a period of time,
- The underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location.
- An economic system in which the government controls the means of production, such as land, labor, and machinery.
- Policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country, with a group of countries, or with specific businesses or individuals.
- Is the part that makes direct use of natural resources. It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory.
- An economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency.
Down
- Refers to people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them.
- The process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers.
- Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce
- Is an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country.
- Economic activity is divided into sectors, with each sector representing a different type of activity.
- Shares characteristics of a group of people.
- Is one that has little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living.
- The practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry.
- An economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies.
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- Sector includes service industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- The search for safety, food, and shelter has resulted in the migration, or mass movement, of people from one part of the world to another.
- Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it.
26 Clues: India's large and popular movie industry. • Shares characteristics of a group of people. • The practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry. • Is a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country. • Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce • ...
Week 11 & 12 2020-11-10
Across
- LAND THAT IS HELD COMMON BY A GROUP OF PEOPLE
- PUBLIC SQUARE
- COWHAND
- FOG OR HAZE COMBINED WITH SMOKE AND OTHER ATMOSPHERIC POLLUTANTS
- A LINE SEPARATING TWO POLITICAL OR GEOGRAPHIC AREAS
- THE REPLANTING OF TREES IN A FORMERLY FORESTED AREA BY PEOPLE OR BY NATURE
- OFFSPRING OF A SPANIARD AND AMERICAN INDIAN
- A MAJOR POPULATION CENTER MADE UP OF A LARGE CITY AND THE SMALLER SUBURBS AND TOWNS THAT SURROUND IT
- THE AMOUNT OF MONEY AN INDIVIDUAL MAKES PER YEAR
- A PERSON WHO WORKS TO PROTECT THE NATURAL WORLD
- ORDER THAT RESTRICTS OR PROHIBITS TRADE WITH ANOTHER COUNTRY
- A PERSON OF MIXED WHITE AND BLACK ANCESTRY
- THE FACT OR STATE OF BEING INDEPENDENT
- A SUBSTANCE THAT PROVIDES NOURISHMENT, SUCH AS ONE OF THE ELEMENTS IN THE SOIL THAT MAKE IT FERTILE
- NATIVES OF AN AREA WHO HAVE BEEN CONQUERED OR DOMINATED BY OTHERS WHO HAVE COME LATER
- DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT WHERE EXECUTIVE POWER IS HELD BY A CABINET COMPOSED BY MEMBERS OF THE LEGISLATURE, HEADED BY A PRIME MINISTER
Down
- INHABITANTS OF SMALL TOWNS, FARMLAND, OR COUNTRY
- VARIETY OF PLANTS AND ANIMALS LIVING IN ONE AREA
- AREA INCLUDING CENTRAL AMERICA, SOUTH AMERICA, MEXICO AND THE CARIBBEAN ISLANDS
- MINERAL USED TO MAKE ALUMINUM
- A FORM OF TOURISM THAT BRINGS PEOPLE TO UNIQUE ECOSYSTEMS WHILE TRYING TO AVOID DAMAGE TO THESE SPECIAL PLACES
- THE INHABITANTS OF A CITY OR TOWN, INCLUDING METROPOLITAN AND SUBURBAN AREAS
- THE PLANTING, GROWING, AND HARVESTING OF TREES
- THE PERCENT OF THE POPULATION OVER AGE 15 THAT CAN READ AND WRITE
- BROADLEAF EVERGREEN FOREST FOUND IN WET AND HOT REGIONS NEAR THE EQUATOR
- A SIZABLE AREA OF PRIVATELY OWNED PROPERTY WITH A LARGE HOUSE
- A SET OF BELIEFS CONCERNING THE CAUSE, NATURE AND PURPOSE OF LIFE
- PER EACH PERSON; DIVIDE THE NUMBER OF SOMETHING (LIKE MONEY) BY THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE IN A PLACE
- TO CUT DOWN ALL TREES IN AN AREA
- DIFFERENCES IN SIZE, DEGREE, CIRCUMSTANCES, LACK OF EQUALITY
- UMBRELLA LIKE COVERING FORMED BY THE TOPS OF TREES IN A RAINFOREST
- THE METHOD OF HUMAN COMMUNICATION, EITHER WRITTEN OR SPOKEN, CONSISTING OF USE OF WORDS IN A STRUCTURED WAY
- A SOCIAL GROUP THAT HAS A COMMON NATIONAL OR CULTURAL TRADITION
- FORM OF GOVERNMENT IN WHICH THE NATIONAL AND STATE GOVERNMENTS SHARE POWERS
- GOVERNMENT WHERE THE PEOPLE ARE REPRESENTED BY ELECTED LEADERS
- THE CHARACTERISTICS OF A HUMAN POPULATION; DATA
- AN AREA THAT HAS BEEN SET ASIDE FOR A SPECIFIC PURPOSE
- AN OVERCROWDED, DIRTY AREA OF A CITY WHERE THE HOUSING IS USUALLY IN VERY POOR CONDITION
38 Clues: COWHAND • PUBLIC SQUARE • MINERAL USED TO MAKE ALUMINUM • TO CUT DOWN ALL TREES IN AN AREA • THE FACT OR STATE OF BEING INDEPENDENT • A PERSON OF MIXED WHITE AND BLACK ANCESTRY • OFFSPRING OF A SPANIARD AND AMERICAN INDIAN • LAND THAT IS HELD COMMON BY A GROUP OF PEOPLE • THE PLANTING, GROWING, AND HARVESTING OF TREES • A PERSON WHO WORKS TO PROTECT THE NATURAL WORLD • ...
APHUG Final Review 2022-05-12
Across
- 2% of the global population resides in this portion of Anglo America
- Hector migrated from Italy as an...
- this boundary contains words not walls
- tool for pinpointing a place's location before analyzing its site characteristics
- easternmost country where Shiite Islam dominates
- branch of Christianity associated with Eastern Europe and Russia
- newly industrialized states are usually in this stage of the DTM
- one of the goals of the self sufficiency approach is to achieve this amongst all sectors of the economy
- incentive to exporting parts to maquiladoras for assembly
- societies that tend to deemphasize religion
- as new permanent settlements have been established this area has increased
- while they don't wear suits and ties that state of Texas and the Amazon jungle are both this type of region
- this shady real estate practice had nothing to do with the movies
- migrating one stride at a time
- the most influential power in a region
- microstate in Southeast Asia
- trade that ensures that people and businesses are not taken advantage of
- when a city acquires more land
- though not seeking a divorce this small piece of a larger state is separated from its home by an intervening country
- northerners claim southerners speak with a twang
- lingua franca of the Roman empire
- Allen's could be described as suburban with a diverse middle income population, and many high-end retail stores
- in this type of migration family is the link to success
Down
- this density loves all land
- this informal mishmash of languages won't fly for long
- either devolution or balkanization for these vulnerable regions
- distortion of distance, relative size, shape, and direction are balanced on this widely used projection
- these settlements develop on the outskirts of areas that are urbanizing very quickly
- language family - language ______ - language group
- problem of a place that has reached maximum carrying capacity
- gerrymandering resulting in odd elongated and nonsensical boundaries in an effort to include likeminded voters
- this country walked the runway for countries that experienced compressed modernity
- the road to modernity for the "Four Tigers"
- a type of EPZ
- state toponym at 60 degrees north, 90 degrees east
- system used to find absolute location
- transportation that is less personal than an automobile but much more sustainable
- deforest this ring from the model as it lacks relevance
- he loved landscapes, hearths, and more!
- how fossil fuels are distributed globally
- the conflict known as the "Troubles"
- according to Spykman's theory, many of the Eurasian countries are on the edge of glory
42 Clues: a type of EPZ • this density loves all land • microstate in Southeast Asia • migrating one stride at a time • when a city acquires more land • lingua franca of the Roman empire • Hector migrated from Italy as an... • the conflict known as the "Troubles" • system used to find absolute location • this boundary contains words not walls • the most influential power in a region • ...
Wetlands 2024-03-26
Across
- sediments suspended in water which cause the water to be unclear or cloudy
- a rising and overflowing of a body of water onto normally dry land
- plains a plain built up by stream deposition
- water the mixture of fresh and saltwater
- alternate rising and falling of the surface of the water, and the area that is affected by this water level change
- system a river and all of its tributaries
- to take in or suck or swallow up
- To make harmful substances harmless
- the carrying away of weathered rock sediments and soil by weather and water; a natural process where soil is lost and transported
- a nonliving part of the environment
- passing through periodically from one region or climate to another for feeding or breeding
- a region of water where a freshwater source meets salt water from the ocean
- a living part of the environment
- a region or area where water travels downhill and ultimately drains into a large body of water
- management the control and regulation of waste
- the shape of a land surface, showing the positions and changes of elevations of the land such as mountains, valleys, and rivers
- all living things (plants, mammals, bacteria, fungi, fish)
- a measure of the dissolved salts in a sample of water
- substances needed by organisms for energy, growth, repair, or maintenance
Down
- an ecosystem in which the roots of the plants are submerged under water at least part of the year (i.e. marshes, bogs, swamps, etc)
- water from rainfall and the melting of ice that runs along the ground.
- the science of cultivation, maintaining, and developing forests
- fairly large organisms that lack a spinal column such as worms, snails, and larvae of flies, dragonflies, etc.
- quality a measurement of water pureness
- feature of the Earth’s surface attributed to natural causes
- oxygen free O2 molecules in water; important for aquatic animal life
- all the biotic communities that live in an area together with the abiotic factors in the environment
- a stream of water that feeds into a larger stream, river, bay or ocean
- the environment in which a particular species lives
- an area of high elevation that separates one watershed from another
- small particles (usually rock) that settle to the bottom of a body of water
- water the water that is above ground in streams, lakes, rivers, and ponds
- water contained in aquifers underground in the porous or jointed bedrock
- a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a liquid or damp substance (such as soil) The pH scale ranges from 0 – 14: 0 is the most acidic, 14 is the most alkaline, and 7 is neutral
34 Clues: to take in or suck or swallow up • a living part of the environment • To make harmful substances harmless • a nonliving part of the environment • quality a measurement of water pureness • water the mixture of fresh and saltwater • system a river and all of its tributaries • plains a plain built up by stream deposition • management the control and regulation of waste • ...
UNIT 7 VOCAB APHUG 2025-05-26
Across
- A period of rapid industrial growth and technological innovation that began in the late 18th century, primarily in Britain.
- The part of the economy involved in knowledge-based activities, such as research, education, and information technology.
- The exchange of goods or services directly for other goods or services without using money.
- A region in the U.S. characterized by industrial decline, especially in manufacturing sectors, largely due to deindustrialization and job losses.
- Development that meets present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, balancing economic growth with environmental protection.
- A composite measure of human development, including indicators of health, education, and income.
- The outer regions of a country or economy, often characterized by lower levels of development and economic activity compared to the core.
- High-tech research and development centers where innovation and technology are key industries.
Down
- A strategy used by manufacturers to reduce inventory costs by receiving goods only when needed in the production process.
- The central region in a country or economy, characterized by high levels of development, economic activity, and political power.
- The part of the economy involved in the extraction and harvesting of natural resources, such as farming, mining, and forestry.
- The part of the economy focused on services rather than goods, such as retail, entertainment, and financial services.
- Groups of countries that have formed trade agreements to promote trade and economic cooperation among members (e.g., the European Union, NAFTA).
- The part of the economy involving high-level decision-making and services, such as government, education, healthcare, and scientific research.
- A theory by Alfred Weber that explains the location of industries based on minimizing transportation costs, labor costs, and agglomeration economies.
- A theory by Immanuel Wallerstein that divides the world into a core, semi-periphery, and periphery, explaining global economic inequalities through historical and structural relationships.
- A policy of extending a country’s power and influence through colonization, military force, or other means.
- Land previously used for industrial purposes that is now abandoned or underused, often requiring cleanup before redevelopment.
- An industry where the final product weighs more or has a greater volume than the raw materials, often located near markets to reduce transportation costs (e.g., automobile manufacturing).
- The differences between men and women in various aspects of society, including income, education, and political representation.
- An industry in which the final product weighs less or has a lower volume than the inputs, often located near raw material sources to reduce transportation costs (e.g., mining, steel production).
- The part of the economy that processes raw materials into finished goods, such as manufacturing and construction.
22 Clues: The exchange of goods or services directly for other goods or services without using money. • High-tech research and development centers where innovation and technology are key industries. • A composite measure of human development, including indicators of health, education, and income. • ...
Engineering Careers Crossword 2019-09-23
Across
- web developer or designer, selects, installs and tests the user interface elements of a website.
- an engineering discipline centered on electrical and computer engineering which seeks to support and enhance telecommunication systems.
- use machines to produce medical images of a patient's body.
- the study of the design, development, and production of air and spacecraft.
- an exciting career that allows the engineer to be involved in all stages of the design process, from conception to presentation of the finished plans.
- work with a combination of biology, medicine and engineering.
- a civil engineer who works for a utility company, such as a water, gas, or electric company.
- specialize in power supply and generation.
- engineering discipline branching from civil engineering that involves the planning, design, construction, operation, and maintenance of roads, bridges, and tunnels to ensure safe and effective transportation of people and goods.
- qualified and certified professional who with a basic understanding of the mere principles of evaluation and control, checks the workings and is responsible for the quality of a company's product and services.
- a field of engineering concerned with the activities related to the production of hydrocarbons, which can be either crude oil or natural gas.
- he or she is ultimately responsible for the entire train during a run.
Down
- people who keep track of the animals.
- work closely with process engineers to improve product yield and to troubleshoot process flow from root causes to equipment tuning.
- develop new equipment and systems for water resource management facilities across the United States.
- involves geology,civil engineering, and fields such as mining, forestry and geography.
- install and maintain the heating and air conditioning systems found in larger buildings
- making machining and fabricating a one step job and provides solutions for complicated engineering jobs.
- aircraft engineers apply scientific and mathematical concepts to solve commercial and practical problems.
- use the principles of electrical engineering to design, develop, test and supervise the manufacture of lighting equipment for consumer, business and industry uses.
- responsible for the design and construction of seagoing vessels and structures.
- they specialise in insulating hot pipes, boilers and vessels to keep heat in or, in refrigeration and air conditioning installations, to keep heat out.
- a person who applies the principles of software engineering to the design, development, maintenance, testing, and evaluation of computer software.
- the branch of engineering concerned with the application of breaking down atomic nuclei (fission) or of combining atomic nuclei (fusion), or with the application of other sub-atomic processes based on the principles of nuclear physics.
- utilize their knowledge of the physical world to manipulate the interactions of individual atoms and molecules.
- help find oil and gas for the country's energy needs.
26 Clues: people who keep track of the animals. • specialize in power supply and generation. • help find oil and gas for the country's energy needs. • use machines to produce medical images of a patient's body. • work with a combination of biology, medicine and engineering. • he or she is ultimately responsible for the entire train during a run. • ...
AP Human Geography Final 2013-05-07
Across
- 1st ring of Von Thunen's model
- clustered or dispersed
- rule where biggest city is twice as large as your 2nd biggest city
- The U.K. is an example
- map that shows a variation with color (fading)
- what you look like
- your location in relation to something else (aka situation)
- might fail in it's originated area, but then spreads elsewhere
- copies a famous person
- map that shows data with colors
- has defined boundaries (aka uniform)
- your cultural background
- 4th ring of Von Thunen's model
- isolated in places and does not diffuse
- Stage that has a high CBR, High CDR, Low NIR
- Shape of an MDC in a population pyramid
- a lot of alike places grouped together
- type of city where the largest city is MORE than twice as big as 2nd
- causing everyone to come together
- Stage that the CBR is still high and the CDR is dropping
- 3 or more countries with the same goal
- distorts areas to show data
- Stage that is getting close to ZPG
- group of people all in an area (SAME AS COUNTRY)
- writes "Principle of Populations"
- popular "I like your shirt, where did you get it?!"
Down
- form of a language, but differs in vocab, pronunciation, and spelling
- Stage that the CBR is continuing to drop/CDR raising; negative NIR
- has similar ethnicities, not always a country
- diffuses through all
- migration for humans
- If a country is a nation
- 2nd major region of population in the world
- Stage that the CBR is dropping and the CDR is continuing to drop; NIR lowering
- a division inside a state
- 4th major region of population in the world
- physical characteristics of a location (also site)
- model made by Hoyt
- 3rd major region of population in the world
- came up with the central place theory
- economic region (Central Place Theory shows this)
- 5th ring of Von Thunen's model
- no defined boundaries (everyone has different opinion)
- # of farmers to unit of arable land
- 3rd ring of Von Thunen's model
- people to arable land
- map that uses dots
- 2nd ring of Von Thunen's model
- model made by Burgess
- Shape of an LDC in a population pyramid
- largest language family
- peace keepers of the world
- language of trade
- 1st major region of population in the world
- occupation sector that takes raw materials out of the ground
- # of people to square mile
56 Clues: language of trade • what you look like • model made by Hoyt • map that uses dots • diffuses through all • migration for humans • people to arable land • model made by Burgess • clustered or dispersed • The U.K. is an example • copies a famous person • largest language family • If a country is a nation • your cultural background • a division inside a state • peace keepers of the world • ...
Water Quality 2023-10-25
Across
- fairly large organisms that lack a spinal column such as worms, snails, and larvae of flies, dragonflies, etc.
- the control and regulation of waste
- To make harmful substances harmless
- sediments suspended in water which cause the water to be unclear or cloudy
- the water that is above ground in streams, lakes, rivers, and ponds
- a nonliving part of the environment
- the science of cultivation, maintaining, and developing forests
- a stream of water that feeds into a larger stream, river, bay or ocean
- feature of the Earth’s surface attributed to natural causes
- water from rainfall and the melting of ice that runs along the ground.
- all the biotic communities that live in an area together with the abiotic factors in the environment
- a measure of the dissolved salts in a sample of water
- water contained in aquifers underground in the porous or jointed bedrock
- an area of high elevation that separates one watershed from another
- the shape of a land surface, showing the positions and changes of elevations of the land such as mountains, valleys, and rivers
- the carrying away of weathered rock sediments and soil by weather and water; a natural process where soil is lost and transported
Down
- alternate rising and falling of the surface of the water, and the area that is affected by this water level change
- passing through periodically from one region or climate to another for feeding or breeding
- a measurement of water pureness
- a region or area where water travels downhill and ultimately drains into a large body of water
- substances needed by organisms for energy, growth, repair, or maintenance
- a rising and overflowing of a body of water onto normally dry land
- the environment in which a particular species lives
- free O2 molecules in water; important for aquatic animal life
- a region of water where a freshwater source meets salt water from the ocean
- an ecosystem in which the roots of the plants are submerged under water at least part of the year (i.e. marshes, bogs, swamps, etc)
- the mixture of fresh and saltwater
- to take in or suck or swallow up
- a plain built up by stream deposition
- a living part of the environment
- small particles (usually rock) that settle to the bottom of a body of water
- a river and all of its tributaries
- all living things (plants, mammals, bacteria, fungi, fish)
- a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a liquid or damp substance (such as soil) The pH scale ranges from 0 – 14: 0 is the most acidic, 14 is the most alkaline, and 7 is neutral
34 Clues: a measurement of water pureness • to take in or suck or swallow up • a living part of the environment • the mixture of fresh and saltwater • a river and all of its tributaries • the control and regulation of waste • To make harmful substances harmless • a nonliving part of the environment • a plain built up by stream deposition • ...
Interconnected World 2023-04-18
Across
- - the process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers.
- - a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies.
- - an economic system in which the government controls the means of production
- - an intergovernmental organization of the world’s major oil-exporting nations.
- - can be either international, when people move from one country to another, or internal, when they move within a given region or country.
- - three basic types of economic systems
- - people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them.
- - refers to an economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful.
- - a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors, Canada and Mexico. The purpose of the pact was to make trade between the three nations easier by eliminating some tariffs and reducing others.
- of an economy is the part that makes direct use of natural resources. It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory.
- - includes service industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers. Examples of service industries include delivery companies, movie theaters, fast food stores, and dry cleaners.
- - an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it.
- is one that has little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living.
- - the shared characteristics of a group of people.
Down
- - is the movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas,
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- - a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country.
- - an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country.
- - such a country has significant industrial development and therefore a relatively high standard of living.
- - the act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently.
- - the informal name for India's large and popular movie industry.
- Infrastructure is the underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location.
- - is the practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry.
- - an economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency.
- includes manufacturing activities, which may be referred to as secondary production.
- - policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country, with a group of countries, or with specific businesses or individuals.
26 Clues: - three basic types of economic systems • - the shared characteristics of a group of people. • - the informal name for India's large and popular movie industry. • - a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country. • The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe • ...
Geography IG 3 (Revision) 2024-10-07
Across
- high clouds.
- plate boundary associated with faults and earthquakes.
- the shape of a LEDC population.
- money sent back to a family by migrant.
- tourism that respects and conserves the environment.
- transport in a river that bounces particles along riverbed.
- a decline in the population
- renovating and restoring an area for wealthier people.
- the ______ rate is the avg. number of children a woman has in her reproductive years (lifetime).
- a non-renewable energy that does not produce greenhouse gas emissions.
- what coral is made from.
- the "one-child" policy.
- a circular reef enclosing a shallow lagoon.
- when the BR is greater than the DR.
- rocks in wire cages.
- a line on a map joining areas of equal rain.
- the sphere of ___ is the area that a settlement serves.
- another word for "solution" erosion.
- the pattern from longshore drift.
- the transformation of habitable land into desert.
- urban ___ occurs when areas grow without planning.
- water-bearing rocks.
- created from longshore drift.
- a policy that encourages births
- settlements tightly clustered around a central feature.
- greenhouse gas from agriculture.
- a volcano with gentle slopes.
- a stream which joins a larger river.
- the scale used to measure seismic activity.
- magma that reaches the earth's surface.
- the actual land on which a settlement is built
Down
- land value & rent decrease as you move away from a city.
- fishing, farming, forestry, mining.
- corkskrew flow of water.
- the point where two rivers meet.
- measures humidity.
- a person forced to flee home country.
- a very dangerous volcano.
- the acronym for city centre.
- service industry.
- a single home far away from others.
- the difference between immigration and emigration.
- erosion that creates smaller, rounder particles.
- the colour of a Stevenson screen.
- the interconnectedness and interdependence of different countries.
- rain collected by vegetation.
- measures wind speed.
- plate boundary that makes an ocean trench.
- the origin of an earthquake under-ground.
- the rural-urban ___ is a boundary of a town or city. it is where cities grow into.
- acronym for number of deaths of children before 1yr, per 1000 live births per year.
- plate boundary that creates mid-atlantic ridges.
- an artificial lake for storing water.
- measures air pressure.
- a type of volcano that will not erupt. (in-active)
- cloud cover is measured in _____.
- the pattern of settlement along a road or river.
- deserts are found on this side of continents.
- a barrier that holds back water.
- minimum # of people needed to make a profit (support a service/good).
60 Clues: high clouds. • service industry. • measures humidity. • measures wind speed. • rocks in wire cages. • water-bearing rocks. • measures air pressure. • the "one-child" policy. • corkskrew flow of water. • what coral is made from. • a very dangerous volcano. • a decline in the population • the acronym for city centre. • rain collected by vegetation. • created from longshore drift. • ...
Water Pollution Ch11 Sec2 2025-05-11
Across
- the disastrous 2010 __ __ oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico made front-page news all around the world.
- oil and gasoline from personal __ is a form of nonpoint source pollution
- sensitive coastal ecosystems, such as __ __, estuaries, and coastal marshes, are the MOST AFFECTED by pollution.
- as underground storage tanks age, they may develop leaks that allow pollutants to seep into the __ and groundwater.
- the process where nutrients flow downstream or settle to the bottom.
- agriculture, forestry, septic systems, boating, industry, urban runoff, construction, habitat degradation, etc. can all be sources of __.
- there are many different kinds of water pollutants, both natural and __-__.
- a nutrient that can cause excessive growth of algae.
- nonpoint source pollution, aka __ __, comes from many different sources that are often difficult to identify.
- the accumulation of pollutants at successive levels of the food chain. (pg R74)
- the solid material that remains after wastewater treatment.
- when lakes and slow-moving streams contain an abundance of nutrients they are __.
- as oxygen levels drop in bodies of water, __ organisms may suffocate and die.
- the fish in figure 3.7 did not die because of a __ __, they died because of thermal pollution.
- in many coastal areas, dead zones exist, where excess nutrients from runoff have caused __ __ levels.
Down
- most natural nutrients in water come from __ matter, such as leaves and animals.
- according to figure 3.9, Bay of __ had the 8th major oil spill in 1979.
- pollutants usually enter groundwater when polluted surface water __ from the Earth's surface.
- large floating mats of algae in polluted bodies of water.
- __ eutrophication is when inorganic plant nutrients enter the water sewage and fertilizer runoff.
- water that contains waste from homes or industry.
- pollution discharged from a single source.
- if the flow of warm water into a lake/stream is constant, it may cause the total __ of an aquatic ecosystem.
- most storage tanks in the US hold __ products, such as gasoline and heating fuel.
- __ pollution can occur when power plants and other industries use water in their cooling systems then discharge the warm water into a lake or river.
- according to the EPA, __ __ remain the largest source of water quality problems in the US.
- pesticides, herbicides, chemical fertilizers, and petroleum products are common __ pollutants.
- __ in some laundry/dishwashing detergents are another major cause of eutrophication.
- the introduction of chemical, physical or biological agents into water that degrade water quality and harm the organisms.
- water is __ and treated to make the water clean enough to return to a river, lake, or the oceans.
30 Clues: pollution discharged from a single source. • water that contains waste from homes or industry. • a nutrient that can cause excessive growth of algae. • large floating mats of algae in polluted bodies of water. • the solid material that remains after wastewater treatment. • the process where nutrients flow downstream or settle to the bottom. • ...
Engineering Careers Crossword 2019-09-23
Across
- an engineering discipline centered on electrical and computer engineering which seeks to support and enhance telecommunication systems.
- work with a combination of biology, medicine and engineering.
- he or she is ultimately responsible for the entire train during a run.
- web developer or designer, selects, installs and tests the user interface elements of a website.
- making machining and fabricating a one step job and provides solutions for complicated engineering jobs.
- the study of the design, development, and production of air and spacecraft.
- work closely with process engineers to improve product yield and to troubleshoot process flow from root causes to equipment tuning.
- develop new equipment and systems for water resource management facilities across the United States.
- responsible for the design and construction of seagoing vessels and structures.
- a field of engineering concerned with the activities related to the production of hydrocarbons, which can be either crude oil or natural gas.
Down
- involves geology,civil engineering, and fields such as mining, forestry and geography.
- specialize in power supply and generation.
- the branch of engineering concerned with the application of breaking down atomic nuclei (fission) or of combining atomic nuclei (fusion), or with the application of other sub-atomic processes based on the principles of nuclear physics.
- qualified and certified professional who with a basic understanding of the mere principles of evaluation and control, checks the workings and is responsible for the quality of a company's product and services.
- use machines to produce medical images of a patient's body.
- an exciting career that allows the engineer to be involved in all stages of the design process, from conception to presentation of the finished plans.
- engineering discipline branching from civil engineering that involves the planning, design, construction, operation, and maintenance of roads, bridges, and tunnels to ensure safe and effective transportation of people and goods.
- utilize their knowledge of the physical world to manipulate the interactions of individual atoms and molecules.
- use the principles of electrical engineering to design, develop, test and supervise the manufacture of lighting equipment for consumer, business and industry uses.
- they specialise in insulating hot pipes, boilers and vessels to keep heat in or, in refrigeration and air conditioning installations, to keep heat out.
- install and maintain the heating and air conditioning systems found in larger buildings
- aircraft engineers apply scientific and mathematical concepts to solve commercial and practical problems.
- a civil engineer who works for a utility company, such as a water, gas, or electric company.
- help find oil and gas for the country's energy needs.
- a person who applies the principles of software engineering to the design, development, maintenance, testing, and evaluation of computer software.
- people who keep track of the animals.
26 Clues: people who keep track of the animals. • specialize in power supply and generation. • help find oil and gas for the country's energy needs. • use machines to produce medical images of a patient's body. • work with a combination of biology, medicine and engineering. • he or she is ultimately responsible for the entire train during a run. • ...
Interconnected World Terms 2023-03-24
Across
- a person who moves away from his or her place of usual residence, whether within a country or across an international border, temporarily or permanently, and for a variety of reasons.
- .The secondary sector covers all those activities consisting in varying degrees of processing of raw materials (manufacturing, construction industries)
- the action of coming to live permanently in a foreign country.
- agreement intended to introduce free trade in marine products"
- North American Free Trade Agreement
- They can be used as a coercive measure for achieving particular policy goals related to trade or for humanitarian violations. Economic sanctions are used as an alternative weapon instead of going to war to achieve desired outcomes
- Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries
- The euro area, commonly
- an economic system where two forces, known as supply and demand, direct the production of goods and services.
- Tariff The Human Development Index (HDI) is a summary measure of average achievement in key dimensions of human development: a long and healthy life, being
- the degree of wealth and material comfort available to a person or community.
- The primary sector includes all those activities the end purpose of which consists in exploiting natural resources: agriculture, fishing, forestry, mining, deposits.
- Developing countries are countries whose standard of living, income, economic and industrial development remain more or less below average.
- The tertiary sector covers a wide range of activities from commerce to administration, transport, financial and real estate activities, business and personal services, education, health and social work.
Down
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- the process of making an area more urban.
- a sovereign state that has a high quality of life, developed economy, and advanced technological infrastructure relative to other less industrialized nations.
- trade left to its natural course without tariffs, quotas, or other restrictions.
- derived from Bombay (now Mumbai),indai
- the basic physical and organizational structures and facilities (e.g. buildings, roads, power supplies) needed for the operation of a society or enterprise.social and economic infrastructure of a country"
- the theory or practice of shielding a country's domestic industries from foreign competition by taxing imports.
- , , process by which colonies become independent of the colondecolonizationizing country.
- an economy in which production, investment, prices, and incomes are determined centrally by a government.
- the spreading out and merging of pieces from different cultures
- an economic system combining private and public enterprise.
- “Economic dependence is a situation in which the cost or the revenues associated with a given project are dependent on the cost or revenues generated by another project.
26 Clues: The euro area, commonly • North American Free Trade Agreement • derived from Bombay (now Mumbai),indai • the process of making an area more urban. • Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries • an economic system combining private and public enterprise. • the action of coming to live permanently in a foreign country. • ...
IW 2023-04-19
Across
- Policies put in place by a government to restrict trade with one country, with a group of countries, or with specific businesses or individuals.
- Was a trade pact signed in 1992 between the United States and its North American neighbors,
- located in the Middle East, North Africa, and South America, agreed to work together to
- The increasing interdependence of nations and peoples across the globe
- Is a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country.
- India's large and popular movie industry.
- Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce
- Is the part that makes direct use of natural resources. It includes agriculture, forestry, fishing, mining, and other industries based on what a country has available in its own territory.
- An economy's dependence on a particular resource in order to be successful.
- Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce, as well as how to produce and distribute it.
- An economic system in which the government controls the means of production, such as land, labor, and machinery.
- The search for safety, food, and shelter has resulted in the migration, or mass movement, of people from one part of the world to another.
- Is the movement of people from rural areas, usually called towns, to urban areas, which are called cities.
- The practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry.
Down
- The underlying foundation or framework of a system, organization, or location.
- Is an index designed by the United Nations to measure the basic contentment of people living in a particular country.
- Refers to people’s quality of life based on the goods and services that are available to them.
- The process by which previously colonized countries free themselves from their colonizers.
- Sector includes service industries that offer services to other businesses and consumers.
- Shares characteristics of a group of people.
- Developed countries often have a high gross domestic product, which is the total value of goods and services sold during a period of time,
- An economic region of Europe that is united under the euro, a common currency.
- Is one that has little industrial development and therefore a relatively low standard of living.
- The act of coming to a new country from one’s home country to live permanently.
- An economic policy in which a nation does not try to limit imports or exports by enacting tariffs or subsidies.
- Economic activity is divided into sectors, with each sector representing a different type of activity.
26 Clues: India's large and popular movie industry. • Shares characteristics of a group of people. • The practice of protecting a country’s local business or industry. • Is a tax that is placed on imported goods when they enter a country. • Is an economic system in which business owners decide what to produce • ...
Plate Tectonics and Rocks Revision 2025-04-08
Across
- is a renewable energy source from the Sun
- is digging into the Earth’s surface to remove stone, gravel, or sand
- is a sedimentary rock made from compressed sand
- rocks are formed from layers of sediments
- is the layer beneath the crust where magma moves
- is one of the uses of limestone and sandstone
- is the point on the surface directly above the focus
- is the extraction of natural resources like coal, oil, and metals from the Earth
- is energy that will not run out
- is an igneous rock with large crystals found in the Wicklow Mountains
- The --------- is a famous fault line in California
- includes replanting trees and protecting wildlife
- is the outer layer of the Earth
- is a metamorphic rock formed from limestone
- rocks are formed when magma or lava cools
- is renewable energy from plants and waste
- ------- farming is when farmers raise animals like cattle or sheep
- is energy like coal and gas that will run out
- rocks are formed when other rocks change under heat or pressure
- form when magma cools slowly underground
- are found in sedimentary rocks like limestone
- is magma that reaches the surface
- ------ farming is when farmers grow crops like wheat or barley
Down
- currents in the mantle cause plate movement
- is a fossil fuel that causes pollution when burned
- is a metamorphic rock formed from sandstone
- can reduce fish stocks and damage marine ecosystems
- is the centre of the Earth made of hot metals
- is a primary economic activity that involves growing crops and raising animals
- A -------- boundary is where plates move apart and new crust is formed
- are gases released from burning fossil fuels
- is a non-renewable fossil fuel formed from dead plants and animals
- is a sedimentary rock formed from marine creatures
- The -------------- is an area with many volcanoes and earthquakes
- are large pieces of the Earth’s crust that move
- involves cutting down trees for wood and replanting new ones
- is global warming caused by too much carbon dioxide
- is electricity made using moving water
- is an igneous rock found in the Giant’s Causeway
- is a primary activity where people catch fish for food and trade
- The ------ Mountains are fold mountains formed at a destructive boundary
- form when lava cools quickly on the surface
- is a renewable energy source from moving air
- A --------- boundary is where plates collide and crust is destroyed
- is the point inside the Earth where an earthquake begins
- An ---------- is the shaking of the ground caused by plate movement
- is molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface
47 Clues: is energy that will not run out • is the outer layer of the Earth • is magma that reaches the surface • is electricity made using moving water • form when magma cools slowly underground • is a renewable energy source from the Sun • rocks are formed from layers of sediments • rocks are formed when magma or lava cools • is renewable energy from plants and waste • ...
Fundamentals of Forestry 2020-01-09
2 Clues: Pine, needles 12-18;larger then white candle in the center of the needle • Pine, needles are four-six inches long; new pine cones appear in groups of three
Biomes 2023-05-03
Across
- Revolution, The Industrial Revolution was a time when the manufacturing of goods moved from small shops and homes to large factories. This shift brought about changes in culture as people moved from rural areas to big cities to work. It also introduced new technologies, new types of transportation, and a different way of life for many.
- Refers to the way something is spread out or arranged over a geographic area.
- industry, Industries including mining, agriculture, forestry and fishing which are concerned with obtaining or providing natural raw materials for conversion into commodities and products for the consumer.
- Geographic information system, a system for storing and manipulating geographical information on computer.
- weathering, The chemical weathering occurs when the climate is hot and wet. The composition of rock is changed when it faces the chemical weathering process. It happens when mineral and water interact each other. Both can form chemical reactions. Chemical weathering is not an instant process.
- A piece of low-lying land reclaimed from the sea or a river and protected by dikes.
- The variety of plant and animal life in the world or in a particular habitat, a high level of which is usually considered to be important and desirable.
- To collect what has been planted and grown in the ground.
Down
- An artificial waterway constructed to allow the passage of boats or ships inland or to convey water for irrigation.
- weathering, Weathering is a natural process that slowly breaks apart or changes rock. Heat, water, wind, living things, and other natural forces cause weathering. Over many years, weathering can shape rock into unusual formations.
- fertility, Refers to the ability of a soil to produce and sustain agricultural plant growth resulting in sustained and consistent yields of high quality
- A brook, stream, or artificially constructed water channel.
- yield, A measure of the quantity of farm production produced of per section of land area.
- an area of open land, especially one planted with crops or pasture, typically bounded by hedges or fences.
- A dike is a barrier used to regulate or hold back water from a river, lake, or even the ocean. In geology, a dike is a large slab of rock that cuts through another type of rock.
- land, Land clearing involves the removal of native vegetation and habitats, including the bulldozing of native bushlands, forests, savannah, woodlands and native grasslands and the draining of natural wetlands for replacement with agriculture, urban and other land uses.
- Animals (as cows, horses, and pigs) kept or raised especially on a farm and for profit.
- Cause (someone or something) to change course or turn from one direction to another.
18 Clues: To collect what has been planted and grown in the ground. • A brook, stream, or artificially constructed water channel. • Refers to the way something is spread out or arranged over a geographic area. • A piece of low-lying land reclaimed from the sea or a river and protected by dikes. • ...
Cabinet Crossword 2022-02-13
Across
- Responsible for administering programs that provides proper housing development such as regulating building codes, providing training/certification for officials, and investing in supplies
- Responsible for protecting the security of the United States overall and providing the military forces needed to deter war on foreign countries, such as army, navy, marine corps, and air force
- Responsible for providing leadership on food, agriculture, natural resources, rural development, nutrition, and related issues, such as farming, ranching, and forestry industries
- Responsible for advising the president and leading the nation in foreign policy issues, such as negotiating proper treaties and agreements with foreign countries and representing the U.S at the United Nations
- Responsible for administering the country’s energy policy, funding scientific research, and managing nuclear/associated infrastructure, such as nuclear power plants and geothermal power plants
- Responsible for managing minerals, national parks, endangered species, federal trust responsibilities to indian tribes on varying lands, such as public lands, private lands, federal lands, and tribal lands
- Responsible for operating and maintaining systems critical to the nation’s financial infrastructure, such as the production of coin and currency, disbursement of payments, revenue collection, and borrowing of funds
- Responsible for protecting the well-being of all americans and national standards/guidelines on health such as providing effective health and human services and making advances in medicine
Down
- Responsible for establishing education policy and administering federal assistance to education, such as managing school loans, licensing teachers/other personnel, and providing educational data
- Responsible for commencing legal travel and trade and securing the nation’s air, land, and sea borders to prevent illegal activity, such as the management over drugs and weapons
- Responsible for enforcing the law and defending interests of relation the the United States, such as ensuring public safety, providing federal leadership over crimes, and seeking just punishment for criminals
- Responsible for creating jobs by promoting economic growth, such as encouraging proper development in the US and blocking harmful trade practices with other nations like China, Japan, France, etc
- Responsible for providing efficient services and vital aid to America’s long serving veterans such as healthcare services, access to national cemeteries to former military personnel, and benefit programs
- Responsible for setting safety regulations for all major modes of transportation and planning and coordinating federal transportation projects, such as trains, planes, cars, and even ships
- Responsible for fostering, promoting, and developing the welfare of wage earners job seeker as well as retirees, such as their working conditions, opportunities for profitable employment, and work related benefits
15 Clues: Responsible for commencing legal travel and trade and securing the nation’s air, land, and sea borders to prevent illegal activity, such as the management over drugs and weapons • ...
Chapter 10 keywords 2020-10-25
Across
- The savings to an individual enterprise that result form spatial association with other similar economic activities.
- The term suggesting the great increases in food production, primarily in subtropical areas, accomplished through introduction of very high-yielding grain crops, particularly wheat and rice.
- Crop production of forest clearings kept in cultivation until their quickly declining fertility is lost. Cleared plots are then abandoned and new sites are prepared.
- The maximum rate at which a renewable resource can be exploited without impairing its ability to be renewed or replenished.
- The view that the optimum location of a manufacturing establishment is at the place where the costs of transport and labor and the advantages of agglomeration or dispersion are most favorable.
- A crop or livestock system in which land quality or extent is more important than capital or labor inputs in determining output.
- The concentric zonal pattern of agricultural land use around a single market center proposed in the von Thunen model.
- Those parts of the economy that fulfill the exchange function and that provide market availability of commodities.
- The migratory but controlled movement of livestock solely dependent upon natural forage.
- A system in which goods and services are created for the use of producers or their immediate families. Market exchanges are limited and of minor importance.
- The study of how people earn a living, how livelihood systems vary by area, and how economic activities are spatially interrelated and linked.
- A crop or livestock system in which land quality or extent is more important than capital or labor inputs in determining output.
Down
- Primary activities involving the harvesting of renewable natural resources or land or water, commercial gathering usually implies forestry and fishing industries.
- Primary activities involving the mining and quarry of nonrenewable metallic and nonmetallic mineral resources.
- The application of large amounts of capital and/or labor per unit of cultivated land to increase output.
- A region´s profit potential for a productive activity compared to alternate areas of production of the same good or to alternate uses of the region´s resources.
- A large business organization operating in at least two separate national economies.
- Those parts of the economy involved in the processing of raw materials derived from primary activities.
- The spatial grouping of people or activities for mutual benefit.
- That employment concerned with research, with the gathering or disseminating of information, and with administration of the other economic activity levels.
- The application of large amounts of capital and/or labor per unit of cultivated land to increase output.
- The production of goods and services, usually consumed or distributed by a governmental agency, in quantities and at prices determined by governmental programs.
- Those parts of the economy involved in making natural resources available for use or further processing.
- The production of goods and services for exchange in competitive markets where price and availability are determined by supply and demand forces.
- A large agricultural holding, frequently foreign-owned, devoted to the production of a single export crop.
- The costs of production inputs that changes as the level of production changes.
26 Clues: The spatial grouping of people or activities for mutual benefit. • The costs of production inputs that changes as the level of production changes. • A large business organization operating in at least two separate national economies. • The migratory but controlled movement of livestock solely dependent upon natural forage. • ...
Settling the West Review 2025-05-14
Across
- – To talk and try to reach an agreement with others.
- – People who illegally traded alcohol, often in exchange for goods from Indigenous people.
- – A situation where there are no laws or where people don’t follow them.
- – Growing crops or raising animals for food.
- – Something that is required or must be done; not optional.
- – Jobs or businesses that use natural resources, like farming, fishing, or mining.
- – The journey of the North-West Mounted Police in 1874 to bring law and order to the western part of Canada.
- – Digging into the earth to find valuable materials like gold, coal, or metals.
- – A group of regular people trained to be soldiers in emergencies, not a full-time army.
- – When people in a country feel connected and work together as one nation.
- – When people rise up and fight against the government or those in power.
- – When something is spread out and not crowded, like people in a large empty area.
- – Land set aside by the government for First Nations communities to live on.
- – A time when many people rushed to a place to search for gold, hoping to get rich.
- – The belief that it was the right and duty of Americans to spread their land and culture across North America.
- – The work of planting, caring for, and cutting down trees for wood and other uses.
- – A traditional Indigenous food made from dried meat, fat, and berries.
- – A Canadian law created in 1876 that controls many aspects of the lives of First Nations people.
- – When one group of people is forced or encouraged to take on the culture, language, and way of life of another group.
Down
- – A law passed in 1814 that banned the sale and export of pemmican, mainly affecting the Métis who traded it.
- – A well-known officer of the North-West Mounted Police who helped bring order to Canada’s West.
- – A formal agreement between two or more groups, often between Indigenous peoples and governments about land and rights.
- – Something that applies to everyone, or is used or accepted everywhere.
- – Having the power to rule or govern yourself without outside control.
- – A system that moves people or goods quickly and easily with little waste of time or resources.
- – A temporary government set up until a more permanent one is created.
- – When rocks and soil suddenly slide down a slope, often caused by rain or earthquakes.
- – Chinese workers who helped build railways in Canada, often doing hard and dangerous jobs.
- – A group of people in Canada with both Indigenous and European ancestry, especially French and Cree.
- – An old form of communication that used wires and signals to send messages over long distances.
- – A large number of people or things coming in at once.
- – The act of killing someone, usually as a punishment for a crime.
- – Catching fish for food or business.
33 Clues: – Catching fish for food or business. • – Growing crops or raising animals for food. • – To talk and try to reach an agreement with others. • – A large number of people or things coming in at once. • – Something that is required or must be done; not optional. • – The act of killing someone, usually as a punishment for a crime. • ...
Chapter 56: Conservation Biology and Global Change 2022-08-22
Across
- a phenomenon that occurs because the biomass at any given trophic level is produced from a much larger biomass ingested from the level below.
- the range of different inherited traits within a species.
- those that humans move internationally or accidentally from the species native locations to new geographical regions.
- a result of large amounts of nutrients being released into a nutrient deficient water body which leads to excessive amounts of aquatic plant growth
- a relatively small area with numerous endemic species and a large number of endangered and threatened species.
- are those that are considered likely to become endangered in the near future.
- a narrow strip or series of small clumps of habitat connecting otherwise isolated patches can be extremely important for conserving biodiversity.
- the translocation of a species to a favorable habitat beyond its native range to protect the species from human-caused threats.
- economic development that meets the needs of people today without limiting the ability pf future generations to meet their needs.
- the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem.
- number of individuals in an idealized population that experience drift at the same rate as the population understudy.
- defined as the variety of different habitats, communities and ecological processes.
- refers generally to the human harvesting of wild organisms at rates exceeding the ability of populations of those species to rebound.
Down
- warming that results when solar radiation is trapped by the atmosphere.
- a treatment, procedure, or other action taken to prevent the loss of a species or population before its too late and extinction occurs.
- the minimal population size at which a species is able to sustain its numbers. Hint: known as (MVP).
- biodiversity islands in a sea of habitat degraded by human activity.
- the amount of added nutrient, usually nitrogen or phosphorus that can be absorbed by plants without damaging ecosystem integrity.
- an extensive region that includes areas relatively undisturbed by humans surrounded by areas that have been changed by human activity and are used for economic gain.
- the fourth threat to biodiversity, global change, alters the fabric of Earth's ecosystems at regional to global scales.
- an organic molecule that consists of nothing else but carbon and hydrogen atoms.
- a small population is vunerable to inbreeding and genetic drift, which draw the population down to an ________, toward smaller and smaller population size until no individuals survive.
- services encompass all the processes through which natural ecosystems purify our air and water.
- integrates ecology, physiology, molecular biology, genetics, and evolutionary biology to conserve biological diversity at all levels.
- on that is "in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range.
- alteration or destruction of a habitat, some examples being agriculture, urban development, forestry, mining, and pollution.
26 Clues: the range of different inherited traits within a species. • biodiversity islands in a sea of habitat degraded by human activity. • warming that results when solar radiation is trapped by the atmosphere. • the variety of life in the world or in a particular habitat or ecosystem. • are those that are considered likely to become endangered in the near future. • ...
Unit 5 review 2022-04-22
Across
- when you and your partner make a life together with the children from one or both of your previous relationships.
- society in which male members have more social and political power than female members.
- the concept that the state alone has the right to use or authorize the use of physical force.
- unregulated system of economic exchange, in which taxes, quality controls, quotas, tariffs, and other forms of centralized economic interventions by government either do not exist or are minimal.
- A socially recognized group of two or more individuals joined by kinship (adoption, blood, fictive kin, or marriage).
- the lens through which a person views the world.
- covers the manufacturing of goods in the economy, including the processing of materials produced by the primary sector.
- consisting of an individual, his or her spouse, and their children
- the linkage between corporations that result when an individual serves on the board of directors of two companies
- one in which many different groups and political parties are allowed to exist.
- any industry involved in the extraction and production of raw materials, such as farming, logging, hunting, fishing, forestry and mining.
- small group of people who control a disproportionate amount of power, wealth, and privilege and access to decision-makers in a political system
- a family that extends beyond the nuclear family, including grandparents, aunts, uncles, and other relatives.
- a public school offering special instruction and programs not available elsewhere, designed to attract a more diverse student body from throughout a school district.
- An economic system based on market competition and the pursuit of profit, in which the means of production or capital are privately owned by individuals or corporations.
Down
- power perceived as legitimate by the social structure.
- social integration, establishing relationships, and conformity to peer norms.
- the act of employing or state of being employed
- a form of government that attempts to assert total control over the lives of its citizens.
- the concept that the state alone has the right to use or authorize the use of physical force.
- assumes that if every individual is exposed to the very same sets of instructional conditions, they all know the same
- government by the people
- familial decision making power. is shared equally among participants in an ongoing activity
- political and economic system in which property and the means of production are owned in common, typically controlled by the state or government.
- a family, group, or government controlled by a woman or a group of women.
- a form of government in which one person or a small group possesses absolute power without effective constitutional limitations.
- systematic process in which someone designs the educating experiences.
- part of a government department which is responsible for one particular thing.
- ability to influence the behavior of others with or without resistance
- formal organizations, typically created through acquisitions or mergers and serve to diversify risk.
30 Clues: government by the people • the act of employing or state of being employed • the lens through which a person views the world. • power perceived as legitimate by the social structure. • consisting of an individual, his or her spouse, and their children • systematic process in which someone designs the educating experiences. • ...
Jpl 2022-03-16
Across
- Buwan kung saan isinilang si Jose P. Laurel.
- Lugar sa sinaunang Athens kung saan kinuha ang pangalang Lyceum
- Kahulugan ng apelyidong Laurel.
- Nagpayo kay Jose P. Laurel upang mag-master sa Constitutional Law.
- Gobernadorcillo ng Tanauan mula 1887 hanggang 1889.
- Bansa kung saan nagtungo si Jose kasama ang ibang Pilipinong pensionados.
- Pangalan ni JPL na nagmula sa tumatayong ama ni Hesus.
- Ugat ng pagkatao ng angkang Laurel.
- Kasama ni Sotero sa pagtatatag ng lihim na samahang De los Cinco
- Pangalan na isinunod sa nakatatandang kapatid ni Jose Rizal.
- Lugar kung saan pumupunta ang pamilya ni Jose tuwing araw ng Sabado at Linggo.
- lenggwahe na inaral ni JPl sa Escuela de Derecho upang maunawaan ang nilalaman ng batas sa panahong iyon.
- Kababayan ni Jose Laurel na kanyang pinakasalan.
- Pinadalhan ni Jose ng liham ng pagbati matapos manalo sa eleksyon.
- Ilang taon ang nagdaan nang muling pumasok si Jose sa pulitika.
- Kursong kinuha ni Jose sa Unibersidad ng Pilipinas pagkaraan ng kanyang pagtatapos sa mataas na paaralan.
- Bilang ng LPU campus sa kasalukuyan.
- Lugar kung saan isinilang si Jose P. Laurel.
- Isang tanyag na manananggol na iginagalang dahil sa kanyang malinaw na interpretasyon sa batas lokal.
- bilang ng mga anak ni Jose P. Laurel at Doña Paciencia.
- Bansa kung saan nagtungo si Jose upang dumalo sa mga espesyal na leksyon sa legal at pilosopiyang pulitikal.
- Ang naging sanhi ng pagkamatay ng ama ni Jose P.Laurel.
Down
- Ina at naging unang guro ng magkakapatid na Laurel.
- Paaralan kung saan nag-aral si Jose Laurel matapos niyang lisanin ang Tanuan.
- Katunggali ni Jose nang siya’y kumandidato bilang senador sa ikalawang distrito.
- Pagkakatuto sa ______ ang dahilan ng pagkawala ng maling paniniwala ni Jose sa relihiyon
- Edad ni Jose P. Laurel nang pumasok siya sa San Juan De Letran.
- Lugar kung saan itinayo ang unang Lyceum of the Philippines University
- Ang ama ni Jose P. Laurel na kinikilala bilang isang manananggol.
- Ginamit ang Laurel bilang apelyido dahil sa payo ng pari ng Taal.
- Paaralan kung saan natamo ni Jose ang Doctor of Jurisprudence Degree.
- Pang-ilan si Jose sa limang magkakapatid.
- Pumasok si Jose sa edad na labingwalo bilang isang _____ sa Bureau of Forestry.
- Dahilan ng paglagpak ni Jose sa unang taon niya sa Letran.
- Mahusay na abugado na kinuha ng mga Laurel nang sila’y umapela sa Korte Suprema.
- Buwan kung kailan nagtamo si Jose ng pangalawang puwesto sa Bar Examinations.
- Bagay na inihandog kay Jose ng kanyang ina.
- edad kung kailan naulila si Jose sa kanyang ama.
- Nagtalaga kay Sotero bilang pangalawang kalihim ng Interyor sa pamahalaang rebolusyonaryo.
- Unibersidad kung saan nagtapos si Jose ng kursong Doctor of Civil Law.
40 Clues: Kahulugan ng apelyidong Laurel. • Ugat ng pagkatao ng angkang Laurel. • Bilang ng LPU campus sa kasalukuyan. • Pang-ilan si Jose sa limang magkakapatid. • Bagay na inihandog kay Jose ng kanyang ina. • Buwan kung saan isinilang si Jose P. Laurel. • Lugar kung saan isinilang si Jose P. Laurel. • Kababayan ni Jose Laurel na kanyang pinakasalan. • ...
Financial Jargon Crosswords 2024-01-15
Across
- A portion of a company's earnings distributed to shareholders.
- A pre-arranged, automatic payment method where a customer instructs their bank to pay a fixed amount to a particular recipient at regular intervals.
- This sector involves the extraction and harvesting of natural products from the earth, such as agriculture, mining, forestry, and fishing.
- The recording of financial transactions, part of the process of accounting in business.
- The act of setting aside money for future use; not spending money.
- A type of security that signifies ownership in a corporation and represents a claim on part of the corporation's assets and earnings.
- The combination of two or more companies into a single entity.
- A type of bank account that allows for frequent, day-to-day withdrawal and deposit of funds, often used for handling personal finances and salary receipts.
- An extension of credit from a lending institution when an account reaches zero, allowing the account holder to temporarily have a negative balance.
- The ease with which an asset, or security, can be converted into ready cash without affecting its market price.
- A machine that allows customers to perform financial transactions, such as cash withdrawals, etc...
- An individual or entity that owns shares in a corporation.
- Ongoing business expenses not directly attributed to creating a product or service.
Down
- The system of money in common use in a country or region.
- A legal proceeding involving a person or business that is unable to repay outstanding debts.
- The systematic process of recording, reporting, and analyzing financial transactions of a business.
- The total sales made by a business in a certain period. It can also refer to employee turnover in human resources.
- Anything of value or a resource of value that can be converted into cash.
- A loan used to purchase a property, where the property itself serves as collateral for the loan.
- The financial gain, especially the difference between the amount earned and the amount spent in buying, operating, or producing something.
- A card issued by a bank allowing the holder to withdraw cash from an ATM.
- The process of spreading out a loan into a series of fixed payments over time.
- A bank account that holds deposited funds, often bearing interest, such as a savings account.
- A financial obligation or debt that a company or individual owes.
- The total value of goods produced and services provided in a country during one year.
- The acquisition of one company by another.
- A sum of money borrowed that is expected to be paid back with interest.
- The total amount of money being transferred into and out of a business, especially as affecting liquidity.
- The ability of a company or individual to meet long-term financial obligations.
29 Clues: The acquisition of one company by another. • The system of money in common use in a country or region. • An individual or entity that owns shares in a corporation. • A portion of a company's earnings distributed to shareholders. • The combination of two or more companies into a single entity. • A financial obligation or debt that a company or individual owes. • ...
