set theory Crossword Puzzles
Collision Theory 2025-08-12
Across
- Increasing the S__________of a reactant leads to an increase in the reaction rate. (letters 7 & 4)
- Minimum energy required for a reaction to take place. (10 & 6 letters).
- Raising this makes particles move faster. (11 letters)
- Special chemicals that speed up the rate of reaction but are not used up in that reaction. (9 letters)
- This increases when reactant particles are closer together. (10 letters)
Down
- Only these types of collisions lead to product formation. (9 letters)
- Alignment needed between particles for a reaction to occur. (11 letters)
- Measurement of how often particles collide. (9 letters)
- The rate of chemical reaction can be increased by increasing the c___________ of one or all of the reactants.(13 letters)
- Atoms, Ions and molecules are? (9 letters)
10 Clues: Atoms, Ions and molecules are? (9 letters) • Raising this makes particles move faster. (11 letters) • Measurement of how often particles collide. (9 letters) • Only these types of collisions lead to product formation. (9 letters) • Minimum energy required for a reaction to take place. (10 & 6 letters). • ...
109.01 Theory 2024-12-11
Across
- High frequency alternating oscillating current
- Removes hair physically from follicle
- Dormant or Shedding Phase of Hair
- A form of depilation that removes hair at the skin level
- electric current to damage the cells of the papilla
Down
- Method of Hair Removal made of Sugar and Lemon Juice
- Transitional Stage of Hair
- Longer, darker, and Stronger than Vellus Hair
- Majority of Hair on the Face
- Growth Stage of Hair
10 Clues: Growth Stage of Hair • Transitional Stage of Hair • Majority of Hair on the Face • Dormant or Shedding Phase of Hair • Removes hair physically from follicle • Longer, darker, and Stronger than Vellus Hair • High frequency alternating oscillating current • electric current to damage the cells of the papilla • Method of Hair Removal made of Sugar and Lemon Juice • ...
Behavior Theory 2025-09-29
Across
- events that cue or elicit a certain behavior.
- aversive control
- punishment that has an aversive stimulus added after the behavior to decrease the frequency of a behavior.
- Therapy that focuses on direct observable behavior.
- a process involving receiving ones present experience without judgment
- punishment that has a reinforcing stimulus removed following the behavior to decrease the frequency of the targeted behavior.
Down
- the environmental events on behavior are mainly determined by this process
- an assessment to help clients produce behavior change by changing environment events.
- conditioning that involves a type of learning in which behaviors are influenced mainly by the consequences that follow them.
- conditioning that refers to what happens prior to learning that creates a response through pairing.
10 Clues: aversive control • events that cue or elicit a certain behavior. • Therapy that focuses on direct observable behavior. • a process involving receiving ones present experience without judgment • the environmental events on behavior are mainly determined by this process • an assessment to help clients produce behavior change by changing environment events. • ...
Colour Theory 2025-11-18
Across
- always looking at the bright side of life.
- a beautiful person displays this.
- a synonym for persuade.
- dark colours represent this.
Down
- white colours are represented here.
- when you can trust someone they show this emotion.
- when you look forward to something you feel this emotion.
- bright, cheerful colours show this.
- feelings all people have.
- these are used to communicate emotion.
10 Clues: a synonym for persuade. • feelings all people have. • dark colours represent this. • a beautiful person displays this. • white colours are represented here. • bright, cheerful colours show this. • these are used to communicate emotion. • always looking at the bright side of life. • when you can trust someone they show this emotion. • ...
Famous Names of Psychology 2016-04-17
Across
- universal expressions
- conformity experiment
- hidden observer effect
- availability heuristic
- validity of mental hospitals
- forgetting curve
- studied the development of babies into adulthood
- assimilation & accommodation
- first ever intelligence test
- eye-witness testimony
- strange situations
- little Albert experiment
- cognitive dissonance
- parenting styles
- general intelligence
- cognitive behavioural therapy
Down
- authority test
- bobo doll experiment
- Stanford experiment
- split-brain
- psychosocial stages
- triarchic theory of human intelligence
- social development theory
- wire mother experiment
- universal grammar
- learned helplessness
- aversive conditioning
- conditioning dogs experiment
28 Clues: split-brain • authority test • forgetting curve • parenting styles • universal grammar • strange situations • Stanford experiment • psychosocial stages • bobo doll experiment • learned helplessness • cognitive dissonance • general intelligence • universal expressions • conformity experiment • eye-witness testimony • aversive conditioning • hidden observer effect • availability heuristic • ...
Cognitive Psychology 2023-11-27
Across
- Duck!
- Basic unit of spoken language
- Deficits in episodic memory
- Factual information
- Production not comprehension
- 2/3 of conversations
- Theory not based on a single prototype
- Iconic memory
- Past events
- Draw me a bath
- Remembering to remember
Down
- More specific
- Can cause aphasia
- Organizational form of memory
- The rules of language
- Comprehension not production
- Testing effect
- Women talk ___ compared to men
- Magical number
- Less specific
- Echoic memory
- Knowledge about a situation
- Theory to show shared features
- Prototypical sequence of events
- Schacter's Seven ___ of Memory
25 Clues: Duck! • Past events • More specific • Iconic memory • Less specific • Echoic memory • Testing effect • Magical number • Draw me a bath • Can cause aphasia • Factual information • 2/3 of conversations • The rules of language • Remembering to remember • Deficits in episodic memory • Knowledge about a situation • Comprehension not production • Production not comprehension • Organizational form of memory • ...
english crossword clil Jose Martin fuel 2022-06-29
Across
- Biological evolution is the set of changes in phenotypic and genetic characters
- an astronomical object orbiting a star that is massive enough to be rounded by its own gravity
- the first theory of biological evolution, coined the term "biology" to designate the science of living beings and was the founder of paleontology
- Colorless, odorless gas. It is necessary for the life of plants and animals.
Down
- He was an English naturalist, recognized as the most influential scientist who raised the idea of biological evolution through natural selection,
- It is the only natural satellite of the Earth. With an equatorial diameter of 3476 km
- it's a big star and it's hot
- is the only natural satellite of the Earth. With an equatorial diameter of 3476 km
- It is a dwarf planet in the solar system located after the orbit of Neptune.
- is the planetary system that gravitationally binds a set of astronomical objects that rotate directly or indirectly in an orbit
- is a planet in the solar system that revolves around its star
11 Clues: it's a big star and it's hot • is a planet in the solar system that revolves around its star • It is a dwarf planet in the solar system located after the orbit of Neptune. • Colorless, odorless gas. It is necessary for the life of plants and animals. • Biological evolution is the set of changes in phenotypic and genetic characters • ...
Test Vocabulary 2023-01-09
Across
- all the components of a story or article that are not the main body of text.
- an argument or set of reasons put forward to oppose an idea or theory developed in another argument.
- hints found within a sentence, paragraph, or passage that a reader can use to understand the meanings of new or unfamiliar words.
- the available body of facts or information indicating whether a belief or proposition is true or valid.
Down
- the way authors organize information in text
- a reason or set of reasons given with the aim of persuading others that an action or idea is right or wrong.
- a thing that is known or proved to be true.
- a settled way of thinking or feeling about someone or something, typically one that is reflected in a person's behavior.
- a particular attitude toward or way of regarding something; a point of view.
- a view or judgment formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge.
- a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event.
11 Clues: a thing that is known or proved to be true. • the way authors organize information in text • a cause, explanation, or justification for an action or event. • all the components of a story or article that are not the main body of text. • a particular attitude toward or way of regarding something; a point of view. • ...
Prehistoric Human 2023-11-22
Across
- A tribe that the ancestors are from proto-Malay
- The big animals like Dinosaurs live in .... era
- The first living things, Microorganism, came to the Earth in .... era
- I'm a primate. I'm Asiatic type and live in Sumatra and Kalimantan. Who am I?
- The period when humans didn't know how to write is
- A remnant made from stone that's for place for resting the corpses is ...
- A period when humans already can make a tools from metal
- The theory of Indonesian ancestors are Nusantara theory, Yunnan out of theory, and ... out of theory.
Down
- prehistoric humans who are considered intelligent humans and were discovered by archeologist ter Haar and W.F.F Oppenoorth in Ngandong is...
- One of three plates that formed the Indonesian Archipelago
- A remnant from the Mesolithic era that was used for placing the offerings is ...
- The ancestor of papua people
- Jawa,Sunda, and melayu is tribs that come from .... Malay
- When the ice at the North Pole covers almost all of the Earth's surface is called .. period
- The era was marked by melting polar ice and rapidly rising sea levels
- A belief that prehistoric followed since the Mesolithic era is dynamism and ....
- a line that separated Australian-type flora and fauna from Transitional-type is ...
- graves or tombs of people's ancestors in Minahasa
- During the hunting and gathering period, humans lived in the cave near ... resources
19 Clues: The ancestor of papua people • A tribe that the ancestors are from proto-Malay • The big animals like Dinosaurs live in .... era • graves or tombs of people's ancestors in Minahasa • The period when humans didn't know how to write is • A period when humans already can make a tools from metal • Jawa,Sunda, and melayu is tribs that come from .... Malay • ...
Communications Chapter 8 2014-04-13
Across
- the closest interpersonal relationship
- efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration
- verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person
- the stage in an interpersonal relationship that normally follows contact
- the quality of communication referring to the dependency of each element on each other element in the process
- in attraction theory, rewards or favors that tend to promote interpersonal relationships
- the first stage of an interpersonal relationship
- a theory that describes relationships as interactions governed by series of rules that couples agree to follow
Down
- in the social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate
- a principle of attraction stating that we are attracted by qualities that we do not possess or that we wish to possess and to people who are opposite or different from ourselves
- a principle of attraction holding that we are attracted to qualities similar to those we possess and to people who are similar to ourselves
- the reaction to relationship threats
- a theory hypothesizing that we develop relationships in which our rewards or profits will be greater that our costs and that we avoid or terminate relationships in which the costs exceed the rewards
- in a relationship this may be distinguished as physical abuse, verbal or emotional abuse, and sexual abuse
- physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction
- the state or process by which one individual is drawn to another and forms a highly positive evaluation of that other person
- a condition in which the breadth and depth of a relationship decrease
- the stage of a relationship during which the connecting bonds between the partners weaken and the partners begin drifting apart
- the breaking of the bonds holding an interpersonal relationship together
- in social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the degree to which the inner personality-inner core-of an individual in penetrated in interpersonal interaction
20 Clues: the reaction to relationship threats • the closest interpersonal relationship • the first stage of an interpersonal relationship • efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration • verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person • physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction • ...
The Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment 2015-05-19
Across
- Bacon / The English scientist who who supported the development of empiricism, or the experimental method
- / Author of Encyclopedia, a compilation of essays and works from the period challenging government and church power
- despot / The term for a leader who accepts enlightenment theories
- Galilei / The Italian astronomer who was forced to recant his theories on the stars and planets after the Church put him on trial in an Inquisition court
- Copernicus / The Polish astronomer who developed the theory that the Sun was the center of the universe
- / The period of reevaluation of the role of people, governments and rights is known as
- / French philosophy who believed in individual freedoms and the rule of law to protect them
- / The Earth centered theory of the universe
- / A new type of music pioneered by composers like Bach, Mozart and Beethoven
Down
- the Great / Russian leader who wrote to Voltaire regarding the need for reforms in government, and who made Russia a major world power by 1780 by taking Poland and gaining access to the Black Sea
- Descartes / The French mathematician who linked algebra and geometry and believed in using logic to prove mathematics.
- Fahrenheit / The German physicist who made the first mercury thermometer and measured freezing at 32 degrees
- theory / The Sun centered theory of the universe
- Newton / The English Scientist who explained the law of gravity
- / New artistic style that focused on brighter, Greek and Roman influenced art and architecture
- method / The method of logically making a hypothesis, testing it, and using test data to draw conclusions
- / The Greek astronomer who expanded upon Aristotle’s view that the Earth was the center of the universe
- / Wrote Leviathan in which he discussed the theory of Social Contract.
- / French philosophy who believed in checks and balances in power, and laws to protect people from each other
- / Believed people are born with natural rights: life, liberty, property
20 Clues: / The Earth centered theory of the universe • theory / The Sun centered theory of the universe • Newton / The English Scientist who explained the law of gravity • despot / The term for a leader who accepts enlightenment theories • / Wrote Leviathan in which he discussed the theory of Social Contract. • ...
The Scientific Revolution And The Enlightenment 2015-05-19
Across
- A new type of music pioneered by composers like Bach, Mozart and Beethoven
- Copernicus The Polish astronomer who developed the theory that the Sun was the center of the universe
- Galilei The Italian astronomer who was forced to recant his theories on the stars and planets after the Church put him on trial in an Inquisition court
- The Earth centered theory of the universe
- Wrote Leviathan in which he discussed the theory of Social Contract.
- theory The Sun centered theory of the universe
- Descartes The French mathematician who linked algebra and geometry and believed in using logic to prove mathematics.
- Author of Encyclopedia, a compilation of essays and works from the period challenging government and church power
- French philosophy who believed in individual freedoms and the rule of law to protect them
Down
- Fahrenheit The German physicist who made the first mercury thermometer and measured freezing at 32 degrees
- Newton The English Scientist who explained the law of gravity
- method The method of logically making a hypothesis, testing it, and using test data to draw conclusions
- Bacon The English scientist who who supported the development of empiricism, or the experimental method
- despot The term for a leader who accepts enlightenment theories
- The period of reevaluation of the role of people, governments and rights is known as
- New artistic style that focused on brighter, Greek and Roman influenced art and architecture
- Believed people are born with natural rights: life, liberty, property
- French philosophy who believed in checks and balances in power, and laws to protect people from each other
- the Great Russian leader who wrote to Voltaire regarding the need for reforms in government, and who made Russia a major world power by 1780 by taking Poland and gaining access to the Black Sea
- The Greek astronomer who expanded upon Aristotle’s view that the Earth was the center of the universe
20 Clues: The Earth centered theory of the universe • theory The Sun centered theory of the universe • Newton The English Scientist who explained the law of gravity • despot The term for a leader who accepts enlightenment theories • Wrote Leviathan in which he discussed the theory of Social Contract. • Believed people are born with natural rights: life, liberty, property • ...
Interpersonal Relationship Stages and Theories 2019-04-23
Across
- A principle of attraction holding that we are attracted to qualities similar to those we possess and to people who are similar to ourselves.
- An emotional feeling that we experience when we desire what someone else has.
- Efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration.
- Reaction to relationship threats.
- The number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate.
- A theory describing how relationships develop from the superficial to the intimate level and from few to many areas of interpersonal interaction.
- The first stage of an interpersonal relationship, and which perceptual and interactional contact occurs.
- A general idea of the profits you feel you should get from a relationship.
- The stage and the interpersonal relationship that normally follows contact, in this stage individuals get to know each other better.
- A principle of attraction stating that we are attracted by qualities that we do not possess or that we wish to possess.
Down
- A theory that describes relationships as interactions govern by series of rules that couples agreed to follow.
- The quality of communication referring to the dependency of each element on each other element in the process.
- A relationship theory that holds that people form relationships with those they consider attractive.
- An the attraction theory, rewards or favors that tend to promote interpersonal relationships.
- A theory hypothesizing that we develop relationships in which our rewards or profits will be greater than our cost.
- We experience relational satisfaction when there is an equal distribution of rewards and cost between the two persons in the relationship.
- The tendency to perceive people that are physically close as belonging together or representing a unit.
- The breaking of the bonds holding it interpersonal relationship together.
- The degree to which the inner personality of an individual is penetrated and interpersonal interaction.
- The closest interpersonal relationships usually a close primary relationship.
20 Clues: Reaction to relationship threats. • Efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration. • The breaking of the bonds holding it interpersonal relationship together. • A general idea of the profits you feel you should get from a relationship. • The number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate. • ...
ENLIGHTENMENT 2020-10-29
Across
- a german astronomer who was well known for his theory on planetary motion
- a series of events that lead up to the emergence of modern science
- scientific method
- and that all humans were born with knowledge through the higher power of God
- she advocated extremely hard for women's rights and was one of the first people to do that
- an English biologist who made one of the first vaccines
- they provided a place for women and men to congregate for intellectual discourse
- One of the first modern chemist
- an object used to see things not visible to the human eye
- to make a telescope
- a renaissance-era mathematician and astronomer that developed the heliocentric theory
- He believed that people of a society should make their own laws
- Planets and the earth revolve around the sun
Down
- an agreement between the people and their authority about what laws they will follow
- an optical instrument designed to make distant objects appear closer
- an Eglish philosopher who was credited with making
- He argued the theory of innate
- an English philosopher and physician, widely regarded as one of the most influential of Enlightenment thinkers and commonly known as the "Father of Liberalism".
- He is the principal source of the theory of separation of powers, which is implemented in many constitutions throughout the world.
- best known for his 1651 book Leviathan, in which he expounds an influential formulation of social contract theory
- he advocated for freedom of speech and for separation from the church
- an English mathematician that was credited for what we know about gravity.
- an Italian astronomer who was one of the first
- He is widely considered the most talented jurist and one of the greatest thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment.
- the intellectuals of the 18th-century Enlightenment
- The earth is at the center of the solar system
26 Clues: scientific method • to make a telescope • He argued the theory of innate • One of the first modern chemist • Planets and the earth revolve around the sun • an Italian astronomer who was one of the first • The earth is at the center of the solar system • an Eglish philosopher who was credited with making • the intellectuals of the 18th-century Enlightenment • ...
Biology Unit 1: Cell Theory and Living Things 2021-08-19
Across
- the process of all the cells maintaining a constant internal and chemical condition.
- a German Physician known as “The Father of Modern Pathology” was a co-founder of the Cell Theory and known as the founder of social medicine.
- the study of life
- Luis Alvarez was a Latin X biologist who was known for creating the hydrogen bubble chamber enabling the discovery of resonance states in particle physics, he also won a nobel Prize in Physics in 1968.
- a Romanian-American Cell Biologist known as the most influential Cell Biologist ever. He was awarded with a Nobel Peace Prize in 1974 in Physiology and medicine.
- a particle made from proteins that can only replicate in living cells.
- a German Physicist who first extended the cell theory to animals.
- a domain of unicellular prokaryotes that have cell walls containing peptidoglycan; corresponds to the kingdom eubacteria.
- the scientist who first discovered cells as the basic unit of life.
- a theory based upon the idea that cells make up all living things and that an organism cannot exist without cells.
Down
- an German Botanist who co-founded the Cell Theory with Theodor Schwann and Rudolf Virchow.
- Ernest Evverett Just was a pioneering African American Biologist he was known for discovering the role of cell surface in the development of organisms.
- a cell that does have and is always separating the genetic material within its nucleus.
- A proven theory discovered by a scientist
- hypothesis is a conclusion that scientists make after collecting and analyzing data.
- organelle is commonly compared with organs in that they are like the specialized organs of a cell.
- Life{cell(s)-->system(s) A system of life\
- A single celled organism of the Kingdom of Protista.
- every living thing has it
- a cell that does not have a separated genetic material with their nucleus.
- A method that scientists and engineers use with experiments
21 Clues: the study of life • every living thing has it • A proven theory discovered by a scientist • Life{cell(s)-->system(s) A system of life\ • A single celled organism of the Kingdom of Protista. • A method that scientists and engineers use with experiments • a German Physicist who first extended the cell theory to animals. • ...
Comparative Policing: A Crossword Quiz 2026-02-19
Across
- Core goal of human trafficking; forcing individuals into labor or sexual servitude
- Type of police system where state or regional units operate independently, common in federal governments
- Final stage of money laundering where illicit funds are fully absorbed into the legitimate economy
- Any illegal activity where a computer is used as a tool or a target for committing offenses
- A person used by a drug syndicate to transport illegal substances across borders
- Theory that as standards of living rise, carelessness increases and crimes of opportunity multiply
- Theory of policing where officers serve higher authorities and follow government directives
- The act of recruiting, transporting, or harboring persons through coercion for labor or sexual exploitation
- The premeditated use of violence to intimidate civilians or governments for political or social objectives
Down
- Early hackers who exploited phone systems in the 1970s to gain free long-distance calls, showing first computer crime
- Theory that a breakdown of social norms or “normlessness” leads to increased crime and deviance
- Stage of money laundering involving complex financial transactions to disguise the audit trail
- Combination of two or more people using terror, threat, or monopoly to maintain continuous criminal activity
- First stage of money laundering where illicit funds are introduced into the financial system or moved out of the country
- Theory of policing where officers serve the community and effectiveness depends on public wishes
- Unauthorized acts of robbery or violence at sea, sometimes including acts on shore
- Crime that affects more than one jurisdiction or crosses national borders
- Theory linking crime to population growth and adolescent subcultures that may foster delinquency
- An organized and relatively stable group that uses violence or threats to monopolize illegal activities
- The process of making illegally obtained money appear as legitimate or “clean” funds
- Type of police system with one national recognized force operating the entire country
21 Clues: Crime that affects more than one jurisdiction or crosses national borders • A person used by a drug syndicate to transport illegal substances across borders • Core goal of human trafficking; forcing individuals into labor or sexual servitude • Unauthorized acts of robbery or violence at sea, sometimes including acts on shore • ...
Chapter One Part One 2022-08-29
Across
- View that human development is multiply determined and cannot be understood within the scope of a single framework
- the view that psychology should be an objective science
- provides connections across microsystems
- Whether there is just one path of development or several paths
- Theory that focuses on changes in criminality over the life course brought about by shifts in experience and life events, less on biological more on psychological and sociological issues
- Social settings that a person may not experience firsthand but that still influence development e. Govt policies
- a useful way to organize the biological, psychological, and sociocultural forces on human development
Down
- the degree to which genetic or hereditary influences (nature) and experimental or environmental influences (nurture) determine the kind of person you are
- Theories proposing that development is largely determined by how well people resolve conflicts they face at different ages.
- Theory based on idea that human development is inseparable from the environmental contexts in which a person develops
- A theory proposing that human cognition consists of mental hardware and mental software
- whether a particular developmental phenomenon represents a smooth progression throughout the life span (continuity) or a series of abrupt shifts (discontinuity)
- The study of the brain and nervous system, especially in terms of brain-behavior relationships
- learning that occurs by simply watching how others behave
- the theory that we learn social behavior by observing and imitating and by being rewarded or punished
- the multidisciplinary study of how people change and how they remain the same over time
- Behaviorism (Skinner) Social learning theory (Bandura)
17 Clues: provides connections across microsystems • Behaviorism (Skinner) Social learning theory (Bandura) • the view that psychology should be an objective science • learning that occurs by simply watching how others behave • Whether there is just one path of development or several paths • ...
The Community of Science 2021-11-12
Across
- ethics related to the environment
- critical feedback
- proof
- our way of life
- formal process to get feedback
- best guess before experiment
- perspective that entire ecosystems should be saved
- get comments
- over time new data leads to new understanding
- broader explanation supported by many test and observations
- something was discovered
- promotes fair and equitable treatment of all people
Down
- human-centered perspective
- good vs. bad
- all life is equally important perspective
- to repeat
- hypothesis
- theory
- our point of view in the world
- examine data
- feedback
- ethics
22 Clues: proof • theory • ethics • feedback • to repeat • hypothesis • good vs. bad • examine data • get comments • our way of life • critical feedback • something was discovered • human-centered perspective • best guess before experiment • formal process to get feedback • our point of view in the world • ethics related to the environment • all life is equally important perspective • ...
The Community of Science 2021-11-12
Across
- ethics related to the environment
- something was discovered
- ethics
- get comments
- good vs. bad
- perspective that entire ecosystems should be saved
- broader explanation supported by many test and observations
- feedback
- hypothesis
- human-centered perspective
- best guess before experiment
- promotes fair and equitable treatment of all people
- to repeat
Down
- all life is equally important perspective
- examine data
- theory
- our point of view in the world
- critical feedback
- proof
- formal process to get feedback
- over time new data leads to new understanding
- our way of life
22 Clues: proof • theory • ethics • feedback • to repeat • hypothesis • examine data • get comments • good vs. bad • our way of life • critical feedback • something was discovered • human-centered perspective • best guess before experiment • our point of view in the world • formal process to get feedback • ethics related to the environment • all life is equally important perspective • ...
Plate Tectonics 2021-01-27
Across
- supercontinent
- minor supercontinent in the south
- hottest layer
- seafloor spreading theory
- crack on crust
- harbor wave
- layer of mantle able to flow
- thicker type of crust
- evidence of Plate Tectonic Theory
- made up of crust and upper mantle
Down
- denser crust
- colliding plates
- plates moving apart
- narrow depression on the ocean floor
- minor supercontinent in the north
- plates sliding past each other
- remains of organisms
- proposed Continental Drift
- pieces of crust
- underwater mountain range
- heat transfer
- where oceanic crust sinks
- above focus
- earthquake
- layer underneath the crust
25 Clues: earthquake • above focus • harbor wave • denser crust • hottest layer • heat transfer • supercontinent • crack on crust • pieces of crust • colliding plates • plates moving apart • remains of organisms • thicker type of crust • underwater mountain range • seafloor spreading theory • where oceanic crust sinks • proposed Continental Drift • layer underneath the crust • layer of mantle able to flow • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- clauses, In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- presupposition, An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- efforts, Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- presuppositions, Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
Down
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Triggers, This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Variables: The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- anaphora, Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook. If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
Down
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
42 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
Down
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- We settle on accommodations that will yield a ______ discourse.
41 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
Down
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
LEADING 2017-02-16
Across
- Non monetary reward that maybe given to individual employees or groups or teams for meritorious service or outstanding performance
- theory is about the mental processes regarding choice, or choosing. It explains the processes that an individual undergoes to make choices.
- Degree to which someone is responsible, dependable, persistent & achievement-oriented
- he (surname only) created is a motivational model that attempts to explain how the needs for achievement, power, and affiliation affect the actions of people from a managerial context
- Theory is also known as the 2 factor theory
- Theory is based in the idea that individuals are motivated by fairness, and if they identify inequities in the input or output ratios of themselves and their referent group
Down
- The surname of the person who created the Equity Theory
- Theory which states that behavior is a function of its consequence
- Management function that involves inspiring & influencing people in the organization to achieve a common goal.
- he (surname only) further developed Maslow's hierarchy of needs by categorizing the hierarchy into his ERG theory
10 Clues: Theory is also known as the 2 factor theory • The surname of the person who created the Equity Theory • Theory which states that behavior is a function of its consequence • Degree to which someone is responsible, dependable, persistent & achievement-oriented • ...
Music Theory 2021-06-18
Across
- A nondiatonic scale consisting of only whole steps
- Group of four pitches
- WWHWWWH
- First tone of a scale
- Collection of pitches ascending or descending
- Music based on major or minor scale is in a __
Down
- A nondiatonic scale consisting of only half steps
- Five-tone scale
- Scale alternating between whole and half steps
- WHWWHWW
10 Clues: WWHWWWH • WHWWHWW • Five-tone scale • Group of four pitches • First tone of a scale • Collection of pitches ascending or descending • Scale alternating between whole and half steps • Music based on major or minor scale is in a __ • A nondiatonic scale consisting of only half steps • A nondiatonic scale consisting of only whole steps
Scientific Theory 2022-08-19
Across
- Created the thermometer and telescope
- Invented the adding machine
- Invented the idea of Heliocentricism
- Measures atmospheric pressure
- Helps prove a scientific point
Down
- German astronomer and mathematician
- Invented calculus
- when many scientists joined together and started proving the churches points wrong
- Was used to see long distances
- An expert student of mathematics
10 Clues: Invented calculus • Invented the adding machine • Measures atmospheric pressure • Was used to see long distances • Helps prove a scientific point • An expert student of mathematics • German astronomer and mathematician • Invented the idea of Heliocentricism • Created the thermometer and telescope • ...
Hair theory 2022-06-11
Across
- produces yellow to red pigments in hair
- excessive amounts of terminal hair in masculine areas
- direct current laser removal
- hair that grows to form a beard
- combination of Thermolysis and galvanic
- fine baby hairs on face mostly on women
Down
- high-frequency current that produces heat to remove hair
- removal of hair at or on the skin level
- produces black and brown pigments in hair
- phase of active growth
10 Clues: phase of active growth • direct current laser removal • hair that grows to form a beard • produces yellow to red pigments in hair • removal of hair at or on the skin level • combination of Thermolysis and galvanic • fine baby hairs on face mostly on women • produces black and brown pigments in hair • excessive amounts of terminal hair in masculine areas • ...
kinetic theory 2022-10-23
Across
- the state in which particles are free to move about
- the model in which heat makes the molecules move faster as they gain energy
- the passage from liquid to solid state
- the action of passing from solid to liquid state
- in this state molecules move according to brownian motion
- state of the matter which cannot be compressed
- the passage from gaseous to liquid state
Down
- the way we define the arrangement of the molecules in a solid
- the state of the matter where particles vibrate
- the way to go from liquid to gaseous state
- the phase in which particles occupy the whole available volume
- the state created from a strong attraction between molecules
12 Clues: the passage from liquid to solid state • the passage from gaseous to liquid state • the way to go from liquid to gaseous state • state of the matter which cannot be compressed • the state of the matter where particles vibrate • the action of passing from solid to liquid state • the state in which particles are free to move about • ...
atomic theory 2022-09-29
10 Clues: found the proton • positively charged atom • positive center of atom • negatively charged atom • atoms with modified mass • last energy ring electrons • neutral subatomic particle • positive subatomic particle • negative subatomic particle • atoms with modified electrons
Cell Theory 2022-10-06
Across
- _____ Contains genetic material
- ________function is support and protection
- _______Semi-permeable
Down
- _______ where Proteins are made
- ________ helps the cell divide.
- ________does not have nucleus
- ______ Found in plants, not animals
- ______substance inside
- _______ are the building block of life
- _________has a nucleus
10 Clues: _______Semi-permeable • ______substance inside • _________has a nucleus • ________does not have nucleus • _______ where Proteins are made • ________ helps the cell divide. • _____ Contains genetic material • ______ Found in plants, not animals • _______ are the building block of life • ________function is support and protection
Atomic Theory 2019-11-07
Across
- orbital Are regions of space around the nucleus of an atom where an electron is likely to be found
- The basic unit of a chemical element
- A stable subatomic particle with a charge of negative electricity, found in all atoms and acting as the primary carrier of electricity in solids
- particles A particle smaller than an atom or cluster of such particles
- The positively charged central core of an atom, consisting of protons and neutrons and containing nearly all its mass
Down
- A subatomic particle of about the same mass as a proton but without an electric charge, present in all atomic nuclei except those of ordinary hydrogen
- A stable subatomic particle occurring in all atomic nuclei, with a positive electric charge equal in magnitude to that of an electron, but of opposite sign
- A coherent, typically large body of matter with no definite shape
- A minute portion of matter
- charges Is the physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force when placed in an electromagnetic field
10 Clues: A minute portion of matter • The basic unit of a chemical element • A coherent, typically large body of matter with no definite shape • particles A particle smaller than an atom or cluster of such particles • orbital Are regions of space around the nucleus of an atom where an electron is likely to be found • ...
Music Theory 2020-10-08
Cell Theory 2020-11-11
Across
- discovered that plants are made of cells
- stated that all living things come from other living things
- produce the first compound microscope
- cells come from _____ cells.
- observed living cells through a simple microscope
Down
- discovered plants are made of cells
- all living things are made of _____.
- cells are the basic unit of _____.
- the first bacteria scrapings to be viewed under a microscope came from this person's _____.
- first to call the spaces in cork "cells"
10 Clues: cells come from _____ cells. • cells are the basic unit of _____. • discovered plants are made of cells • all living things are made of _____. • produce the first compound microscope • discovered that plants are made of cells • first to call the spaces in cork "cells" • observed living cells through a simple microscope • ...
Color Theory 2020-11-30
Across
- red, yellow and blue
- a tool artists use to learn about color
- created through light, perceived through vision
- the order of the colors
- black, white and gray
- orange, green and violet
Down
- the colors that we can see
- across from each other on the color wheel
- next to each other on the color wheel
- the color spectrum found in nature
10 Clues: red, yellow and blue • black, white and gray • the order of the colors • orange, green and violet • the colors that we can see • the color spectrum found in nature • next to each other on the color wheel • a tool artists use to learn about color • across from each other on the color wheel • created through light, perceived through vision
Darwin's Theory 2021-01-03
Across
- islands studied by Darwin
- humans breeding plants and animals to obtain desirable traits
- random changes in DNA that can affect traits
- he discovered natural selection
Down
- different traits within a population
- leads to organisms that are better adapted to their environment
- the idea that all life on earth shares an ancestor
- a group of the same species living together in a group
- beneficial trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce
- a group of organisms that can mate and produce fertile offspring
10 Clues: islands studied by Darwin • he discovered natural selection • different traits within a population • random changes in DNA that can affect traits • the idea that all life on earth shares an ancestor • a group of the same species living together in a group • beneficial trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce • ...
Hair Theory 2021-03-05
Across
- loss of hair over entire scalp and body
- degree of coarseness or fineness in the hair fiber
- premature shedding of hair during the resting stage
- red, watery, or puss-filled areas caused by an animal parasite
- abnormal coverage of hair on all parts of the body
Down
- crusty, red irritated patches on the scalp
- cuticle becomes cracked and frayed
- ability of the hair to absorb moisture
- short, fine, non-pigmented hair that replaces lanugo hair
- ability of hair to stretch and return to its original shape
10 Clues: cuticle becomes cracked and frayed • ability of the hair to absorb moisture • loss of hair over entire scalp and body • crusty, red irritated patches on the scalp • degree of coarseness or fineness in the hair fiber • abnormal coverage of hair on all parts of the body • premature shedding of hair during the resting stage • ...
Cell theory 2021-08-31
Across
- it maintains the cells shape
- A type of cell that evolves from the other and are mostly multi celled
- has two kinds and one makes the cells proteins and the other make lipids and breaks down materials
- holds the cells DNA
- contains nutrients,water,waste,and enzymes
Down
- performs photosynthesis
- oldest cell type
- it generates chemical energy
- breaks things down
- membrane protects the cell
10 Clues: oldest cell type • breaks things down • holds the cells DNA • performs photosynthesis • membrane protects the cell • it maintains the cells shape • it generates chemical energy • contains nutrients,water,waste,and enzymes • A type of cell that evolves from the other and are mostly multi celled • ...
Nuclear Theory 2023-03-03
Across
- particle with a positive charge located in the nucleus of an atom and has a mass of 1 amu
- the central part of the atom housing the protons and neutrons.
- the number of protons in an atomic nucleus
- the particles or the energy that is released from the nucleus.
- the process in which an unstable nucleus changes by emitting particles or releasing energy.
- these particles consist of helium nuclei, which are 2 protons and 2 neutrons, and are very large.
Down
- these particles consist of fast moving electrons (e-), which are much smaller and lighter than alpha particles
- a subatomic particle with a neutral charge located in the nucleus of an atom and has a mass of 1 amu
- a subatomic particle with a negative charge located orbiting around the nucleus within the electron cloud
- this radiation is an extremely energetic form of light, which means it does not have a charge and is not made of matter
10 Clues: the number of protons in an atomic nucleus • the central part of the atom housing the protons and neutrons. • the particles or the energy that is released from the nucleus. • particle with a positive charge located in the nucleus of an atom and has a mass of 1 amu • the process in which an unstable nucleus changes by emitting particles or releasing energy. • ...
Nuclear Theory 2023-03-03
Across
- particle with a positive charge located in the nucleus of an atom and has a mass of 1 amu
- the central part of the atom housing the protons and neutrons.
- the number of protons in an atomic nucleus
- the particles or the energy that is released from the nucleus.
- the process in which an unstable nucleus changes by emitting particles or releasing energy.
- these particles consist of helium nuclei, which are 2 protons and 2 neutrons, and are very large.
Down
- these particles consist of fast moving electrons (e-), which are much smaller and lighter than alpha particles
- a subatomic particle with a neutral charge located in the nucleus of an atom and has a mass of 1 amu
- a subatomic particle with a negative charge located orbiting around the nucleus within the electron cloud
- this radiation is an extremely energetic form of light, which means it does not have a charge and is not made of matter
10 Clues: the number of protons in an atomic nucleus • the central part of the atom housing the protons and neutrons. • the particles or the energy that is released from the nucleus. • particle with a positive charge located in the nucleus of an atom and has a mass of 1 amu • the process in which an unstable nucleus changes by emitting particles or releasing energy. • ...
Audience Theory 2014-05-14
Across
- when the audience is this they are prone to the cultivation theory
- newspapers adopt this mode of address when discussing serious issues
- uses and grats theory, actively accessing a media text for escapism
- when the mode of address is personal, as if the text is speaking to you
- Stuart Hall was the theorist who created encoding and ___ idea
Down
- uses & grats theory, actively accessing a text to self educate or learn something new.
- when the reader rejects the programmes code and interprets the text differently
- the reader partially shares the programme's code and ideology
- reader shares the programme's code and ideology
- this can affect the way an audience reacts to a text
10 Clues: reader shares the programme's code and ideology • this can affect the way an audience reacts to a text • the reader partially shares the programme's code and ideology • Stuart Hall was the theorist who created encoding and ___ idea • when the audience is this they are prone to the cultivation theory • ...
Cell Theory 2016-11-16
Across
- Discovered cells and began studying them
- First to see a cell with a microscope
- The basic unit of structure in all organisms
- Has special functions inside a cell
- The scientific study of cells
Down
- Discovered that plants had cells
- All cells must come from these cells
- Describes the properties of cells
- Discovered that animals had cells
- Stated that "All cells come from cells"
10 Clues: The scientific study of cells • Discovered that plants had cells • Describes the properties of cells • Discovered that animals had cells • Has special functions inside a cell • All cells must come from these cells • First to see a cell with a microscope • Stated that "All cells come from cells" • Discovered cells and began studying them • ...
particle theory 2018-08-06
10 Clues: it is a firm object • the physical change • the material or stuff • The form a substance takes • forms to the object it is in • the change from liquid to gas • the change from liquid to solid • there are particles all around us • it is free to move in any direction • you can't see it with the human eye
Music theory 2021-11-24
10 Clues: loud • quiet • vocal music • a two beat note • played with sticks • controls the loudness • a string played instrument • vocal or instrumental sounds • where the notes are place to read • a large brass wind instrument of bass pitch
Music Theory 2023-10-20
Across
- The clef used for notes above middle C
- Used to divide up bars of music
- What are the 5 lines you write music on called?
- How many notes in an octave?
- Another word for the speed of the music
Down
- A note worth one count
- a note worth four counts
- The clef used for notes below middle C
- A note worth two counts
- The instrument you're learning
10 Clues: A note worth one count • A note worth two counts • a note worth four counts • How many notes in an octave? • The instrument you're learning • Used to divide up bars of music • The clef used for notes above middle C • The clef used for notes below middle C • Another word for the speed of the music • What are the 5 lines you write music on called?
Economical theory 2024-02-07
Across
- How we call materialistic production?
- Which features of Free Market Economy represents more than one producer of good/services insures choice?
- What are usually a good way to organize economic activity?
- Which of them is Capita good? a) combine b) bread
Down
- Which term means something that induces person to act ( price of onion, gasoline price, driving faster or slower)
- Rational people think at the what ?
- Equality ( getting more taxes from the rich and giving more social payments to the poor) between citizens leads to what?
- What is the basic economic problem - the gap between limited resources and theoretically limitless wants?
- Which term refers to something required for a safe, stable and healthy life ? ( air, water, food, land, shelter)
- What is the study of how societies make decisions in managing its scarce resources
10 Clues: Rational people think at the what ? • How we call materialistic production? • Which of them is Capita good? a) combine b) bread • What are usually a good way to organize economic activity? • What is the study of how societies make decisions in managing its scarce resources • ...
economic theory 2024-02-07
Across
- - something that induces a person to act
- - a basic economics problem is the gap between limited ......... and theoretically limitless wants
- - more than one producer of good/services insures choices
- - a situation in which there is not enough of something
Down
- - final goods are ready to consume
- - the plessure happiness or satisfaction obtained from consuming a good or service
- - all the production and exchange activities that take place
- - something required for a safe, stable and healthy life (e.g. air, water, food, land and shelter)
- - getting more taxes from the rich and giving more social payments to the poor
- - desire, wish or aspiration
10 Clues: - desire, wish or aspiration • - final goods are ready to consume • - something that induces a person to act • - a situation in which there is not enough of something • - more than one producer of good/services insures choices • - all the production and exchange activities that take place • ...
Nebular theory 2023-12-13
Across
- “Small” chunks of rock and ice that come by because they have an orbital path
- small particles collide and get bigger then collect more particles and get bigger
- Anything that orbits a planet
- a large cloud of dust and gas in space
- “Small” rocks in space
Down
- Earth was molten during the formation of our solar system and a piece broke off and became the moon
- Small pieces of rocks that enter the Earth’s atmosphere
- Earth was struck by an object and a piece of Earth’s mantle flew off and started orbiting Earth.
- the moon was in space then Earth’s gravity captured it and the moon started orbiting it.
- The most accepted theory
10 Clues: “Small” rocks in space • The most accepted theory • Anything that orbits a planet • a large cloud of dust and gas in space • Small pieces of rocks that enter the Earth’s atmosphere • “Small” chunks of rock and ice that come by because they have an orbital path • small particles collide and get bigger then collect more particles and get bigger • ...
Cell Theory 2023-09-18
Across
- the basic building blocks of all living things
- a self-regulating process by which a living organism can maintain internal stability while adjusting to changing external conditions
- cells containing membrane-bound organelles and are the basis for both unicellular and multicellular organisms
- All living things are made up of one or more cells
- any organism that lacks a distinct nucleus and other organelles due to the absence of internal membranes
- This person made a hand-held microscope
Down
- a cluster of conditions that occur together, increasing your risk of heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes
- these provide structure for the body, take in nutrients from food, convert those nutrients into energy, and carry out specialized functions
- The cell was first discovered and named by
- German physiologist who founded modern histology by defining the cell as the basic unit of animal structure
10 Clues: This person made a hand-held microscope • The cell was first discovered and named by • the basic building blocks of all living things • All living things are made up of one or more cells • any organism that lacks a distinct nucleus and other organelles due to the absence of internal membranes • ...
Atom Theory 2025-01-22
10 Clues: neutral charge • center of atom • positive charge • negative charge • solid energy level • really tiny particle • J.JThomsom Atom model • what are protons made from • what are neutrons made from • what is the atomic number of helium
Color Theory 2024-10-21
Across
- Color scheme made up of variations of one color are called:
- A wheel used to teach students about color theory, color mixtures, and color schemes.
- When you use analogous colors in a design, they create visual...
- Colors that are next to each other on the color wheel are called:
- When two primary colors are mixed together they create...
Down
- Red, yellow, and blue are referred to as...
- Colors that are across from each other on the color wheel are called:
- When you mix red and green they create this color.
- When a primary and secondary color are mixed together they create...
- When you use complementary colors in a design, they create visual...
10 Clues: Red, yellow, and blue are referred to as... • When you mix red and green they create this color. • When two primary colors are mixed together they create... • Color scheme made up of variations of one color are called: • When you use analogous colors in a design, they create visual... • Colors that are next to each other on the color wheel are called: • ...
literary theory 2025-09-09
Across
- a underlying message in a story.
- is anything that stands for, or represents, something else
- the events that make up a story
- gives human characteristics to inanimate objects, animals, or ideas
Down
- where the story takes place.
- is an outrageous exaggeration that emphasizes a point
- iorny, Occurs when a speaker’s intention is the opposite of what he or she is saying
- a statement that doesnt make sense.
- a struggle face by a main character
- a word used to compare things
10 Clues: where the story takes place. • a word used to compare things • the events that make up a story • a underlying message in a story. • a statement that doesnt make sense. • a struggle face by a main character • is an outrageous exaggeration that emphasizes a point • is anything that stands for, or represents, something else • ...
particle theory 2025-05-30
Across
- not the same as weight
- the state of matter that water falls under
- Something that makes things warm
- warmer areas in a gas or liquid rise to cooler areas creating a circular pattern
- a device that can track heat and icy temperature
Down
- Can be squashed
- Heat that is transferred through open space using electromagnetic radiation
- can be found in 3 forms
- the state of matter that is rock hard
- the transfer of heat between substances that are in direct contact with each other
10 Clues: Can be squashed • not the same as weight • can be found in 3 forms • Something that makes things warm • the state of matter that is rock hard • the state of matter that water falls under • a device that can track heat and icy temperature • Heat that is transferred through open space using electromagnetic radiation • ...
PE theory 2025-05-22
Across
- This food source is broken down into ATP
- What is the scientific name of ATP?
- What is the by-product of the Anaerobic system?
- (carbs) What is the fuel source of the Aerobic system?
Down
- Does this system use oxygen?
- The fuel source of this system is Glucose.
- This acronym means Beat(s) per minute
- This system uses explosive intensity
- When you exercise you burn this
- This increases Heart rate (HR)
10 Clues: Does this system use oxygen? • This increases Heart rate (HR) • When you exercise you burn this • What is the scientific name of ATP? • This system uses explosive intensity • This acronym means Beat(s) per minute • This food source is broken down into ATP • The fuel source of this system is Glucose. • What is the by-product of the Anaerobic system? • ...
cutting Theory 2025-07-19
Across
- bone What is the name of the bone that if found at the back of the head
- rules A safety practice to avoid accidents with scissors.
- section the head with a cross.
- Keeping your tools and work area ____ prevents accidents.
- kit accessible in case of minor cuts or nicks
- The term for the guide line where the hair is cut.
Down
- The tool used to hold hair sections in place during cutting
- the hairis elevated to remove length and weight.
- Protective clothing worn by clients during haircutting.
- Cutting at 45 degrees usually creates this type of haircut.
10 Clues: section the head with a cross. • kit accessible in case of minor cuts or nicks • the hairis elevated to remove length and weight. • The term for the guide line where the hair is cut. • Protective clothing worn by clients during haircutting. • rules A safety practice to avoid accidents with scissors. • Keeping your tools and work area ____ prevents accidents. • ...
Number Theory 2025-07-28
Across
- The opposite of a composite number
- The product of three and four
- A number with more than two factors
- A number that divides exactly into another number
Down
- A number you get by multiplying a whole number by itself
- A number that appears in the time tables of two or more numbers
- Square root of forty-nine
- How many prime numbers are between one and ten
- The square root of thirty-six
- The only even prime number
10 Clues: Square root of forty-nine • The only even prime number • The product of three and four • The square root of thirty-six • The opposite of a composite number • A number with more than two factors • How many prime numbers are between one and ten • A number that divides exactly into another number • A number you get by multiplying a whole number by itself • ...
Atomic Theory 2025-10-21
Across
- (3 words)developed by Niels Bohr in 1913, revolutionized our understanding of atomic structure
- the smallest unit of an element that maintains its chemical properties
- (two words)differs from alpha and beta decay as it doesn't change the atomic number or mass
- (two words)represents the number of protons in its nucleus
- (two words)happens when a neutron in the nucleus transforms into a proton, releasing an electron (beta particle) and an antineutrino
- atoms of the same element that have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons
Down
- (two words)the electrons in the outermost shell of an atom
- (two words)occurs when an unstable atom releases an alpha particle (two protons and two neutrons) from its nucleus
- (two words)can hold a specific number of electrons, and electrons can move between these levels by absorbing or releasing energy.
- (two words)the total mass of protons, neutrons in an atom
10 Clues: (two words)the total mass of protons, neutrons in an atom • (two words)the electrons in the outermost shell of an atom • (two words)represents the number of protons in its nucleus • the smallest unit of an element that maintains its chemical properties • (two words)differs from alpha and beta decay as it doesn't change the atomic number or mass • ...
music theory 2025-09-29
Hair Theory 2026-01-03
Across
- Hair removal technique that uses a paste made primarily of sugar applied to the skin in a rolling motion
- A condition that causes abnormal coverage of hair where normally only lanugo hair appears; also known as Ambras syndrome
- wax Also known as a classic wax, soft wax or strip wax; applied with a spatula and removed with a strip
- The removal of hair from under the skin at the follicle; examples include waxing, sugaring, tweezing, threading and electrolysis
- method Electrical epilation method that combines thermolysis and galvanic current
- Permanent method of hair reduction that uses electric current to damage the cells of the papilla and disrupt hair growth; usually performed by a licensed professional called an electrologist
Down
- The process of removing hair at or near skin level
- Abnormal growth of hair on a person's face and body, especially on a woman
- wax Also referred to as hard wax; generally used for small areas and thinner, more sensitive skin
- pulsed light Uses a similar principle as lasers, but this type of light is not considered to be a laser light; an intense pulsed light beam creates a burst of energy used to destroy hair bulbs with minimal scarring
10 Clues: The process of removing hair at or near skin level • Abnormal growth of hair on a person's face and body, especially on a woman • method Electrical epilation method that combines thermolysis and galvanic current • Hair removal technique that uses a paste made primarily of sugar applied to the skin in a rolling motion • ...
collision theory 2026-01-13
Across
- Collision Collision that results in a chemical reaction
- Measure of average kinetic energy particles
- amount of substances in a given volume
- substances that speeds up a reaction without being used up
Down
- Theory Theory that reactions occur when particles collide
- Proper alignment of molecules during a collision
- Energy Energy of motion of particles
- Rate Speed at which reactants turn into products
- How often particles collide
- Energy Minimum energy needed for a reaction to occur
10 Clues: How often particles collide • amount of substances in a given volume • Energy Energy of motion of particles • Measure of average kinetic energy particles • Proper alignment of molecules during a collision • Rate Speed at which reactants turn into products • Energy Minimum energy needed for a reaction to occur • ...
Astronomy Crossword 2020-05-07
Across
- the study of the organization and evolution of the universe
- laws
- the theory of cosmology in which the expansion of the universe began with a primeval explosion (of
- time, matter, and energy)
- the building of heavier atomic nuclei from lighter ones
Down
- the speculative idea that our universe is just one of many universes, each with its own set of
- the energy that is causing the expansion of the universe to accelerate; its existence is inferred
- observations of distant supernovae
8 Clues: laws • time, matter, and energy) • observations of distant supernovae • the building of heavier atomic nuclei from lighter ones • the study of the organization and evolution of the universe • the speculative idea that our universe is just one of many universes, each with its own set of • ...
Chapter 24 2021-05-17
Across
- belief that actions themselves, rather than consequences, determines the worth of actions are right or wrong according to the morality of the acts themselves
- Duty to tell the truth and avoid deception
- ARRT's mandatory standards of minimally acceptable professional conduct
- Rights of individuals or groups that exist separately from governmental or institutional gurantees; usually asserted based on moral principals or rules
- care for; an emotional commitment to and a willingness to action behalf of a person with whom a caring relationship exists
- Internal controls of a profession based on human values or moral principals
- gross violation of commonly held standards of decency or human rights
- Regulations established by government and applicable to people within a certain political subdivision
- Ethical reflection that emphasize an intimate personal relationship value system that includes such as virtues as sympathy, compassion, fidelity, discernment, and love
- Basis for right-based ethical theory; each individual is protected and allowed to pursue projects
- use of moral principles as a basis for defending a chosen path of action in resolving an ethical dilemma
- Rights of individual or groups that are established and guaranteed by law
- General, universal guides to action that are derived from so-called basic moral truths that should be respected unless a morally compelling reason exists not to do so; also referred to as ethical principles
- persons self reliance, independence, liberty, rights, privacy, individual choice, freedom of the will and self contained ability to decide
- generally accepted customs, principles, or habits of right living and conduct in a society and the individuals practice in relation to these
- Collection or set of values that an individual or group has an each persons personal guide
- Systematic study of rightness and wrongness of human conduct and character as known by natural reason
Down
- Practice behaviors that are defines by members of a profession
- Ethical theory that ephasizes the agents who perform actions and make choices; character and virtue form the framework of this ethical theory
- belief that health-related information about individual patients should not be revealed to others
- Belief that individual rights provide the vital protection of life, liberty expression, and property
- publicly displayed ethical conduct of a profession, usually embedded in a code of ethics; affirms the professional as an independent, autonomous, responsible decision maker
- ethical principal that places high value on avoiding harm to others
- Equitable, fair, or just conduct in dealing with others
- Ideals and Customs of a society toward which the members of a group have an affective regard; a value may be a quality desirable as an end in itself
- Articulated statements of role morality as seen by members of a profession
- Justified claims that an individual can make on individuals, groups, or society; divided into legal rights and moral rights
- statements of right conduct governing individual actions
- bodies of systematically related moral principals used to resolve ethical dilemmas
- going of goof; active promotion of goodness, kindness, and charity
- standards set by individuals or groups of individuals
- Relationship that exists when 2 mutually dependent groups in a society recognize certain expectations of each other and conduct their affairs accordingly
- Strict observance of promises or duties; loyalty and faithfulness to others
- obligations placed on individuals, groups, and institutions by reason of the so-called moral bond of our interdependence with others
- Traits of character that are socially valued, such as courage
- belief that the worth of actions is determined by their ends or consequences; actions are right or wrong according to the balance of their good and bad consequences
- belief system based on a set of moral principles that are embedded in a common morality
- situations requiring moral judgement between 2 or more equally problem-fraught alternatives; 2 or more competing moral norms are present, creating a challenge about what to do
38 Clues: Duty to tell the truth and avoid deception • standards set by individuals or groups of individuals • Equitable, fair, or just conduct in dealing with others • statements of right conduct governing individual actions • Traits of character that are socially valued, such as courage • Practice behaviors that are defines by members of a profession • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
Down
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
Down
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • ...
Pragmatics Midterm Crossword! 2020-10-21
Across
- Which basic characteristic of implicature is shown in this sentence “Xavier used to play soccer in high school.”
- What is the name of this failure to fulfill a maxim in this conversation? Allen: Where does Sarah live? Emily: She lives somewhere in the south of California.
- The name given to the propositions that form a propositional function is _____.
- We also love Pragmatics because it is dealing with language ______.
- Another name for a bridging reference is ____________.
- Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation.
- Suggests an “AND” relationship between propositional variables.
- An assumption associated with wh-questions is known as a _____________.
- The essential effect of an assertion is to _____ the context set
- What term is used to refer to plugs that allow for presuppositions to be partially projected?
- Which entailment test is used in this sentence? “Little Annie does not know that Unicorns do not exist, but Unicorns do exist.”
- Grice’s Maxim of Manner states “Be brief”, which means avoid unnecessary _____.
- In the sentence: “If Professor Syrett likes our midterm project, then we might get an A!” Does the presupposition project, true or false?
- In an entailment, a entails b if the information that b conveys is ____ in the information a conveys.
- We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ .
- Is this example of common ground true or false? “Hey I’m in Professor Syrett’s class!(Points at Linguistic Building)”
- Plugs usually use verbs of sayings. Name a verb that is commonly used? (Hint it ends in “ll”)
- The man who proposed scalar implicatures is named Laurence “Larry” ____.
- Assertions are _______ made in context.
Down
- Grice states that “Our conversations do not consist of a succession of disconnected remarks, and would not be rational if they did. They are characteristically, to some degree at least, __________; and each partisans recognizes in them, to some extent, a common purpose or set of purposes, or at least a mutually accepted direction.”
- Lagendoen and Savin proposed the _______ hypothesis of accommodation.
- This list: Existential, Factive, Non-factive, Lexical, Structural, Counterfactual, are _______________.
- What is the name of this sentence in the P family? “Has Sean realized that his dog is missing?” Suppose the presupposition assertion is [Sean realized that his dog is missing].
- [1] If [2] Professor Syrett is sad, then [3] she will hug her Pragmatics Textbook.If we place the presupposition “Professor Syrett has a Pragmatics Textbook” in [1] what kind of accommodation will that be called?
- ______ gives meaning in context.
- Utterances become an _______ in a conversation, happening at a particular time and place.
- Suppositions differ from assertions in that they only aim to add content to the context set __________.
- Responding as ________ and as consistent as possible at a certain point in a conversation.
- Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables.
- The two kinds of rules that make up conversation (and baseball) are constitutive and ______.
- A presupposition is what is taken by the speaker to be ______ knowledge.
- True or false: if a speaker asserts a weaker item on a lexical scale, they implicate the stronger version.
- People who use common ground have ______ knowledge.
- [1] If [2] Sue is sad, then [3] she will do Pragmatics homework! Where would you place the presupposition “Sue has Pragmatics homework” to show that the speaker assumes the common ground (we are aware of the situation).
- Verbs such as: glad, realize, know… describe which kind of presupposition?
- Stalnaker states “use pragmatic theory — theory of conversational contexts —- to take some of the weight off semantic and syntactic theory...defend simper semantic and _______ analyses and give more natural explanations of many linguistic phenomena”.
- Which Grice’s maxim is violated in Kate’s utterance? Kate: I have a mermaid in my bathtub.
- In this sentence, “Catherine stopped the car before it hit the stop sign.” What kind of trigger is “stopped?”
- Are assumptions about common ground made in social encounters and as well not restricted to language (True or False)?
- There are two kinds of filters we’ve talked about: if/then and _____/or.
40 Clues: ______ gives meaning in context. • Assertions are _______ made in context. • Local Accommodations propose a ______ situation. • People who use common ground have ______ knowledge. • Another name for a bridging reference is ____________. • Suggests an “OR” relationship between propositional variables. • We love semantics because it is dealing with language ______ . • ...
Theories of Motivation (Chaper 5) 2014-03-26
Across
- / Hull's theory of motivation is _____ theory
- / Hull belived that motivation was driven by _________ needs
- / Related to drive theory is ___________ Theory
- / The _______ level of the 3M model consists of the our dispositions we form as a child
- / The grade that we deserve is a ____________
- / The founder of the 3M model of motivation
- / Ryan and Deci beleived that motivation was to satisfy ______ needs
- / The need for belonging and social interaction is often known as
Down
- / Product ___________ is related to the level of interest in a product
- / According to Mazlow, we must satisfy what needs before anything else
- / Maslow invented the hierarchy of what?
11 Clues: / Maslow invented the hierarchy of what? • / The founder of the 3M model of motivation • / Hull's theory of motivation is _____ theory • / The grade that we deserve is a ____________ • / Related to drive theory is ___________ Theory • / Hull belived that motivation was driven by _________ needs • / The need for belonging and social interaction is often known as • ...
The Big Bang Theory 2024-04-09
Across
- an idea that is backed by a significant amount for evidence
- _____ was able to observe galaxies moving away from each other
- makes up 75% of the universe
- the leftover radiation from the Big Bang
- This theory is believed to have started about 14 billion years ago
- How long after the big bang did the universe grow to be the size of a softball
Down
- evidence that supports the Big Bang Theory
- acts the opposite way of gravity
- predicted the Big Bang Theory before there was evidence for it
- evidence that supports the Big Bang Theory
- Galaxies moving further apart from eachother
- makes up 25% of the universe
12 Clues: makes up 25% of the universe • makes up 75% of the universe • acts the opposite way of gravity • the leftover radiation from the Big Bang • evidence that supports the Big Bang Theory • evidence that supports the Big Bang Theory • Galaxies moving further apart from eachother • an idea that is backed by a significant amount for evidence • ...
Rats & Empathy Crossword 2024-06-06
Across
- Rats developed empathy through...
- Rats were tested for _ hour(s) at a time.
- The Theory of _ is the second theory as to why we feel empathy.
- The second rat was trapped in a _ during the experiment
- The _ Theory is the first theory as to why we feel empathy.
Down
- Scientists conducted _ on rats to test for empathy.
- Rats are _, allowing them to eat many different foods
- What animal has recently shown proof of empathy?
- Colonies of rats can have numbers that reach into the...
- Groups of rats are called?
- What emotion do rats and humans share?
11 Clues: Groups of rats are called? • Rats developed empathy through... • What emotion do rats and humans share? • Rats were tested for _ hour(s) at a time. • What animal has recently shown proof of empathy? • Scientists conducted _ on rats to test for empathy. • Rats are _, allowing them to eat many different foods • The second rat was trapped in a _ during the experiment • ...
scientific vocab crossword 2025-08-21
Across
- relationship between a set of numbers
- divded ranked order
- seperates the lowest part of the data set
- collection of facts and information
- thought process
- problem solver
- any kind of data
- picture example of a model
- stand out in a data set
- seperates the highest part of the data set
- mid-term in a data set
- the measurement of the highest and lowest part of the data set together
Down
- summarises a group of data in a picture
- average
- a way to represent data
- shows data
- to build upon
- paths and ways of engineering
- observation made with thoughts
- the most a number appears
- possibilities for a data set
21 Clues: average • shows data • to build upon • problem solver • thought process • any kind of data • divded ranked order • mid-term in a data set • a way to represent data • stand out in a data set • the most a number appears • picture example of a model • possibilities for a data set • paths and ways of engineering • observation made with thoughts • collection of facts and information • ...
Nursing Research 2022-10-27
Across
- explanation for observations
- experiences that cannot be numerically quantified
- detailed examination
- you must gather this to prove your research
- Focuses on confirmation of theory by explaining, demonstrating empirical analytical emphasis
- Focuses on discovery, meaning of theory by
Down
- experiences that can be numerically quantified
- an element of your research that may change
- things you're going to write about
- demonstrating human science emphasis
- your published paper is an example now a part of "scientific __________"
- a question
12 Clues: a question • detailed examination • explanation for observations • things you're going to write about • demonstrating human science emphasis • Focuses on discovery, meaning of theory by • an element of your research that may change • you must gather this to prove your research • experiences that can be numerically quantified • ...
Moral Theories 2017-09-25
Across
- theory that morally right actions are those that directly produce the greatest overall good, everyone considered
- theory that the morally right action is the one that advances one's own best interests
- theory asserting that the morally right action is the one that god or gods command
- moral theory asserting that the rightness of an action does not depend on its consequences
Down
- according to Kant, a command that we should follow regardless of our particular wants and needs; a principle from which all other maxims are derived
- theory that the morally right action is the one covered by a rule that if generally followed would produce the most favorable balance of good over evil, everyone considered
- moral theory asserting that what makes an action right is its consequences
- a theory asserting that the morally right action is the one that follows the examples of nature
- a useful theory should be this, in order to be internally consistent
9 Clues: a useful theory should be this, in order to be internally consistent • moral theory asserting that what makes an action right is its consequences • theory asserting that the morally right action is the one that god or gods command • theory that the morally right action is the one that advances one's own best interests • ...
Stonehenge 2022-06-07
Across
- The facts, signs or objects that make you believe something is true.
- An unspecified type of something - some ..... of
- The act of forming opinions about something without having all the facts
- To make someone confused because they didn't understand something
- Suggest or promote (an idea)-put ..........
- To be still in a state without a definite answer - to ......... unanswered
Down
- A formal set of ideas that is intended to explain something
- An official examinaiton of the facts of a situation
8 Clues: Suggest or promote (an idea)-put .......... • An unspecified type of something - some ..... of • An official examinaiton of the facts of a situation • A formal set of ideas that is intended to explain something • To make someone confused because they didn't understand something • The facts, signs or objects that make you believe something is true. • ...
Religion Escape Room Crossword (Puzzle #3) 2023-08-14
Across
- The theorist who developed the idea of 'civil religion'
- A theory that views religion as an essential part of maintaining social cohesion
- Malinowski stressed which functions of religion?
- The belief that multiple gods exist
Down
- The belief in an objective, immovable standard
- Things set apart or forbidden which provoke strong feelings of awe, wonder or fear
- A religious group that often subscribes to unusual beliefs or practices and has a charismatic leader
- A major religion with a strict caste system
8 Clues: The belief that multiple gods exist • A major religion with a strict caste system • The belief in an objective, immovable standard • Malinowski stressed which functions of religion? • The theorist who developed the idea of 'civil religion' • A theory that views religion as an essential part of maintaining social cohesion • ...
2nd Year Bachelor degree in Psychology 2024-02-25
Across
- behaviors that people use to separate themselves from unpleasant events, actions, or thoughts
- anything that can trigger a physical or behavioral reaction or change.
- set of ideas that is intended to explain facts or events.
Down
- relationship or connection between two or more variables.
- the part of the mind which is inaccessible but affects behaviour and emotions.
- test measures what it is intended to measure.
- how an individual recognizes and interpreter sensory information.
- the forces which initiate and guide behaviours.
8 Clues: test measures what it is intended to measure. • the forces which initiate and guide behaviours. • relationship or connection between two or more variables. • set of ideas that is intended to explain facts or events. • how an individual recognizes and interpreter sensory information. • anything that can trigger a physical or behavioral reaction or change. • ...
Population Patterns Unit 2024-12-02
Across
- Factor, a reason in which a person would want to move into a new place
- Pot Theory, cultures lose their unique qualities while blending together
- a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country, Coming Into
- Island, both an immigration and deportation facility from 1910-1940 and detained here under oppressive conditions
- preference for "native born" people and a desire to limit immigration
- a person who moves from one place to another, especially in order to find work or better living conditions
- Island, was once the busiest immigrant inspection and processing station in the U.S.
Down
- Diffusion, the spread of cultural beliefs and social activities from one group to another
- a person who leaves their own country in order to settle permanently in another, Exiting
- the set of shared customs, arts, social institutions, and traditions of a particular nation, people, or other social group, Our culture is a combination of all of these elements
- Exclusion Act 1882, first federal law to restrict immigration into the U.S. and banned all immigration of Chinese laborers (skilled and unskilled laborers and Chinese employed in mining)
- Salad Theory, how different cultures can be integrated while still maintaining their own unique identities
- Factor, a reason in which a person would want to move away from where they are currently living
13 Clues: preference for "native born" people and a desire to limit immigration • Factor, a reason in which a person would want to move into a new place • Pot Theory, cultures lose their unique qualities while blending together • a person who comes to live permanently in a foreign country, Coming Into • ...
Communications Chapter 8 2014-04-13
Across
- in the social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the number of topics about which individuals in a relationship communicate
- verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person
- the closest interpersonal relationship
- a principle of attraction holding that we are attracted to qualities similar to those we possess and to people who are similar to ourselves
- in a relationship this may be distinguished as physical abuse, verbal or emotional abuse, and sexual abuse
- a condition in which the breadth and depth of a relationship decrease
- a theory that describes relationships as interactions governed by series of rules that couples agree to follow
- the stage in an interpersonal relationship that normally follows contact
Down
- in attraction theory, rewards or favors that tend to promote interpersonal relationships
- in social penetration theory of interpersonal relationships, the degree to which the inner personality-inner core-of an individual in penetrated in interpersonal interaction
- a principle of attraction stating that we are attracted by qualities that we do not possess or that we wish to possess and to people who are opposite or different from ourselves
- a theory hypothesizing that we develop relationships in which our rewards or profits will be greater that our costs and that we avoid or terminate relationships in which the costs exceed the rewards
- the first stage of an interpersonal relationship
- the breaking of the bonds holding an interpersonal relationship together
- the state or process by which one individual is drawn to another and forms a highly positive evaluation of that other person
- the quality of communication referring to the dependency of each element on each other element in the process
- efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration
- the reaction to relationship threats
- physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction
- the stage of a relationship during which the connecting bonds between the partners weaken and the partners begin drifting apart
20 Clues: the reaction to relationship threats • the closest interpersonal relationship • the first stage of an interpersonal relationship • efforts to reverse the process of relationship deterioration • verbal and nonverbal signals that show love for another person • physical closeness; one of the qualities influencing attraction • ...
A Brief History of Time 2021-10-13
Across
- branch of physics that describes the smallest particles and how they work, contradicts the Theory of Relativity
- subatomic particles that make up hadrons (protons and neutrons)
- Found that not everything has to orbit the Earth, also found 4 of Jupiter’s moons
- number of flavors of quarks
- shows us what a particle looks like from different directions
- the redshift or blueshift of the light expelled of an object moving towards or away from us
- Albert Einstein’s theory that combined the ideas of gravity, space, and time
- the force that two bodies put on each other as a product of their masses
- boundary of a black hole
- regions where gravity is so strong that nothing can escape it
- the measure of disorder in a system
- force responsible for radioactivity
- the point where something takes an infinite value
- E=mc^2
- the force that charged molecules exert
- the force that holds neutrons, protons, and atomic nuclei together
Down
- one of the first people to think the Earth is round
- Geocentric model of the Solar System
- ________ duality is the property of expressing properties of both waves and particles
- narrator of the book, also did groundbreaking work with black holes
- theory attempting to explain the combined forces
- the electromagnetic and weak nuclear force acting as one at high temperatures
- The principle that uses the fact that we can make observations as a base to describe things cosmologically
- made the theory that the universe can expand, also made models to show it
- The idea that the Universe is identical whichever direction we look in
- The idea that the Universe is identical where ever we are
- generally accepted theory of the beginning of the universe
- the principle that we can’t know both the speed and location of an object with complete accuracy
- Discovered that stars could collapse under their own gravity to reach extremely high densities
- Laws of Motion
30 Clues: E=mc^2 • Laws of Motion • boundary of a black hole • number of flavors of quarks • the measure of disorder in a system • force responsible for radioactivity • Geocentric model of the Solar System • the force that charged molecules exert • theory attempting to explain the combined forces • the point where something takes an infinite value • ...
A Brief History of Time 2021-10-13
Across
- The idea that the Universe is identical whichever direction we look in
- the redshift or blueshift of the light expelled of an object moving towards or away from us
- made the theory that the universe can expand, also made models to show it
- The principle that uses the fact that we can make observations as a base to describe things cosmologically
- boundary of a black hole
- branch of physics that describes the smallest particles and how they work, contradicts the Theory of Relativity
- regions where gravity is so strong that nothing can escape it
- the electromagnetic and weak nuclear force acting as one at high temperatures
- number of flavors of quarks
- subatomic particles that make up hadrons (protons and neutrons)
- the force that charged molecules exert
- theory attempting to explain the combined forces
- force responsible for radioactivity
- one of the first people to think the Earth is round
- the point where something takes an infinite value
Down
- E=mc^2
- Found that not everything has to orbit the Earth, also found 4 of Jupiter’s moons
- ________ duality is the property of expressing properties of both waves and particles
- the principle that we can’t know both the speed and location of an object with complete accuracy
- Albert Einstein’s theory that combined the ideas of gravity, space, and time
- Geocentric model of the Solar System
- the force that holds neutrons, protons, and atomic nuclei together
- Discovered that stars could collapse under their own gravity to reach extremely high densities
- narrator of the book, also did groundbreaking work with black holes
- shows us what a particle looks like from different directions
- The idea that the Universe is identical where ever we are
- Laws of Motion
- the force that two bodies put on each other as a product of their masses
- generally accepted theory of the beginning of the universe
- the measure of disorder in a system
30 Clues: E=mc^2 • Laws of Motion • boundary of a black hole • number of flavors of quarks • force responsible for radioactivity • the measure of disorder in a system • Geocentric model of the Solar System • the force that charged molecules exert • theory attempting to explain the combined forces • the point where something takes an infinite value • ...
Growth and Development Crossword 2021-11-22
Across
- Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years
- Stage of life that begins in mid 30s and lasts through the late 60s
- In the first 24 hours of life, you assess profound ______ changes
- This period is within the first 28 days of life
- How does an infant communicate?
- Part of the developmental framework for nursing encourages ______ care
- Erikson’s theory states that identity versus role confusion occurs during which developmental stage
- A full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks
- The ______ stage of psychosexual development occurs between 6-12 years of age
- As a part of moral decision making, the nurse should _________ their own beliefs when helping patients make decisions
- Health risk for adolescence
- During puberty, _____ becomes possible
Down
- Leading cause of death in adolescents
- ______ proposed that the human mind is divided into the unconscious and conscious mind and focuses on psychosexual development
- Health risks for preschoolers are injury prevention and _____ safety
- The postformal thought of the cognitive development theory occurs during the _______stage
- assessment of _______ _______ is critical for healthcare teaching
- Child’s stage of life from 12 months-36 months
- During preschooler stage, _____ movements continue to develop
- _____ is the theorist that created the theory known as a maturational developmental theory and states that development is directed by genes
- _____ is a health risk for toddlers
- Shoulder/hip width and ______ are physical changes during adolescence
- Stage of life from late teens to mid-to-late 30s
- When assessing a patient, you want to ask _____ ended questions
- Stage of life from 13-20 years
- _____ _____ is an essential component of discharge
- Preconventional reasoning is when children are asking ______?
- Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years
- Child's stage of life from 1 month-1 year
- There are six stages and three levels of _______ moral developmental theory
30 Clues: Health risk for adolescence • Stage of life from 13-20 years • How does an infant communicate? • _____ is a health risk for toddlers • Child’s stage of life from 3-5 years • Leading cause of death in adolescents • Child’s stage of life from 6-12 years • During puberty, _____ becomes possible • A full term pregnancy lasts _____ weeks • ...
Activity #5 2024-02-13
Across
- Type of crime that has the highest clearance rate.
- A type of sample where each person in the population has an equal chance of being selected into the sample.
- The people who participate in a research study.
- Type of research that often starts with qualitative data and then tries to build a theory.
- Refers to tension that develops from wanting to achieve monetary success.
- Source of data that uses the "hierarchy rule".
- Which zone has the highest rate of crime in social disorganization theory?
- True or False: Researchers discovered a "crime" gene in 1990 that explains criminal behavior with 90% accuracy.
- Less serious crimes that are punishable by up to one year in jail and that may not receive any jail time at all.
- Function of punishment that focuses on seeking revenge. An eye for an eye approach.
- A violation of a formal, written law.
Down
- Specific prediction on how two or more variables are related to one another.
- Argues that a person's behavior depends on their socialization and environment.
- Lombroso's classification for 2/3 of criminals who do not have distinguishing physical characteristics.
- Exiting crime.
- In classic strain theory, which adaptation involves giving up on the culturally prescribed goals, but still practicing all the appropriate behaviors?
- Theory that looks at how certainty of punishment, celerity of punishment, and severity of punishment reduce crime.
- The belief that the size and shape of your skull can determine your criminality.
- Source of data that divides offenses in Group A and Group B offenses.
- Type of crime that both young people and African Americans are most disproportionately arrested for.
- True or False: According to the UCR, crime rates have been generally decreasing for the last 30 years.
- Routine Activities Theory is often discussed with which geometric shape?
22 Clues: Exiting crime. • A violation of a formal, written law. • Source of data that uses the "hierarchy rule". • The people who participate in a research study. • Type of crime that has the highest clearance rate. • Source of data that divides offenses in Group A and Group B offenses. • Routine Activities Theory is often discussed with which geometric shape? • ...
CRJ200 EXAM REVIEW 2025-04-28
Across
- Burglary rates are higher for these households
- Groth asserts that this type of rapist commits rape to exert control over their victim(s)
- This entity is victimized the most in the U.S. by healthcare fraud
- Most burglaries involve ________ entry
- According to UCR data theft from this is the most frequent type of larceny
- The women who killed on the orders of Charles Manson are known as this type of serial killers
- The degree of premeditated murder
- The theory that posits that negative life experiences can explain criminal behavior
- This occupation experiences the highest rate of workplace violence
- The group over-represented in offense statistics on shoplifting
- This suitable thing is one of three requirements for victimization according to routine activities theory
- Structures are the most common target for this offense
Down
- The most commonly used illicit drug
- Mary getting robbed in her residence by a man with a gun is an example of this type of robbery
- Sutherland applied elements of this associational theory to white collar crime
- This theory focuses on the concept of stigmatized neighborhoods to explain variations in risk of victimization
- A capable one of these is effective in deterring crime according to routine activities theory
- The amount ordered to be paid by an offender to the victim(s) of their crime
- This type of employee is most likely to steal cash or merchandise from a company
- A good source of data when wanting to better understand those who have been victimized by crime
- An example of a tangible cost of crime involving physical injury
- The female who most likely killed John Doe according to Wolfgang's research
- The best way to address both shoplifting and theft by employees
- Juveniles living in these areas are most likely to commit the offense of arson
- A male serial killer is more likely to target this individual
25 Clues: The degree of premeditated murder • The most commonly used illicit drug • Most burglaries involve ________ entry • Burglary rates are higher for these households • Structures are the most common target for this offense • A male serial killer is more likely to target this individual • The best way to address both shoplifting and theft by employees • ...
Business Mgmt Chapter 9 Part 1 2024-02-09
Across
- Theory suggesting that money is the sole motivator for workers.
- A theory that arranges the five basic needs of people—physiological, security, social, esteem, and self-actualization—into the order in which people strive to satisfy them.
- 1924-1932 studies that mark the beginning of concern for human relations in the workplace.
- Aspects of this theory of motivation that focuses on the work setting and not the content of the work; these aspects include adequate wages, comfortable and safe working conditions, fair company policies, and job security.
- The personal satisfaction and enjoyment that you feel after attaining a goal.
Down
- The most basic human needs to be satisfied—water, food, shelter, and clothing.
- The need to be the best one can be; at the top of the hierarchy.
- One prominent aspect of human relations, is an employee’s attitude toward his or her job, employer, and colleagues.
- The need for love, companionship, and friendship—the desire for acceptance by others.
- The study of the behavior of individuals and groups in organizational settings.
- The need to protect oneself from physical and economic harm.
- Aspects of this theory of motivation that focuses on the content of the work itself; these aspects include achievement, recognition, involvement, responsibility, and advancement
- This person proposed a theory of motivation that focuses on the job and on the environment where work is done.
- An inner drive that directs a person’s behavior toward goals.
- This involves emotional involvement and commitment.
- The need for respect—both self-respect and respect from others.
- The benefits and/or recognition that you receive from someone else.
17 Clues: This involves emotional involvement and commitment. • The need to protect oneself from physical and economic harm. • An inner drive that directs a person’s behavior toward goals. • Theory suggesting that money is the sole motivator for workers. • The need for respect—both self-respect and respect from others. • ...
Plate Tectonics by Noah Campbell 2013-01-16
Across
- Under the lithosphere
- Top layer of the Earth
- Top layer of the mantle
- A mountain that shoots lava
- When a oceanic plate sinks
- Ocean ground
- A place created when plates slide apart
- Created theory of continental drift
- Layer between crust and core
Down
- Where sea-floor spreading takes place
- Creating rock, causing continental drift
- When faults move
- Created theory of plate tectonics
- Our planet
- A crack in a plate
- drift When continents move
- Collision
- Created when old rock sinks in the ocean
- Section of the lithosphere
- Sections
20 Clues: Sections • Collision • Our planet • Ocean ground • When faults move • A crack in a plate • Under the lithosphere • Top layer of the Earth • Top layer of the mantle • When a oceanic plate sinks • drift When continents move • Section of the lithosphere • A mountain that shoots lava • Layer between crust and core • Created theory of plate tectonics • Created theory of continental drift • ...
Scientific Revolution 2021-05-04
Across
- Confirmed the Heliocentric Theory through his work and writings, and was forced to "recant" his books and live the rest of his life under house arrest
- instrument that measures temperature
- The Father of Modern Medicine (oath named after him)
- credited with coming up with the Scientific Method
- First to write of the Heliocentric Theory
- Tried to explain the universe in mathematical terms - all existing in "harmony"
- instrument that allowed people to see "the world above," peering farther from earth than had ever before been possible
- 1628 - accurately described the circulatory system
Down
- Corrected the mistaken belief that objects in the solar system traveled in perfect circular orbits, asserting that they traveled along elliptical paths.
- 14th Cent. Jewish astronomer who invented an instrument to measure the distance between objects in the sky
- Studied anatomy - found that arteries were filled with blood (not air!)
- Christian scholar (1200s) who tried to show that faith and reason could exist in harmony
- The Father of Geometry
- instrument that allowed people to discover "the world below" which had previously been too small for human eyes to see
- believed one should question everything - and doubt, until it has been proven by reason
- First to write about the Geocentric Theory
- instrument that measures atmospheric pressure
- Expanded Geocentric Theory - from fallen earth to perfect heaven
- Three Laws of Motion and Universal Gravitation
19 Clues: The Father of Geometry • instrument that measures temperature • First to write of the Heliocentric Theory • First to write about the Geocentric Theory • instrument that measures atmospheric pressure • Three Laws of Motion and Universal Gravitation • credited with coming up with the Scientific Method • 1628 - accurately described the circulatory system • ...
Plate Tectonics Menu Appetizer 2017-02-21
Across
- the sideways and downward movement of the edge of a plate of the earth's crust into the mantle beneath another plate.
- the hot substance in the the core of the earth
- the movement caused within a fluid by the tendency of hotter and therefore less dense material to rise, and colder, denser material to sink under the influence of gravity, which consequently results in transfer of heat.
- pieces of Earth's crust and uppermost mantle, together referred to as the lithosphere.
- when subduction Occurs in the oceanic crust it forms a
- the movement of the divergent boundary
- when to plates are colliding it forms what boundary
- The earth was once one huge earth called
- when two plates in the continental crust divide it forms a
Down
- when two plates are sliding it forms what boundary
- the movement of the transform boundary
- when two plates are dividing it forms what boundary
- when two plates in the oceanic crust divide it forms a
- the movement of the convergent boundary
- the uppermost layer of the oceanic portion of a tectonic plate.
- the scientist who invented the continental drift theory
- the theory that the earth was once one huge earth called Pangaea and then separated.
- the theory that the earth sea floor spreads and generates new earth and gets rid of old earth
- the scientist who invented the sea floor spreading theory
19 Clues: the movement of the transform boundary • the movement of the divergent boundary • the movement of the convergent boundary • The earth was once one huge earth called • the hot substance in the the core of the earth • when two plates are sliding it forms what boundary • when two plates are dividing it forms what boundary • ...
Professional ethics medical imaging personnel Chapter 24 2023-05-17
Across
- Ethical theory that emphasizes the agents who perform actions and making chocices
- rights of individuals or group that exist separately from governmental or institutional guarantees
- Generally accepted customs principle or habits of right living and conduct in a society
- Standards set by individual or groups of individuals
- Articulated statements of role morality as by by the members of profession
- manners and attitudes generally accepted by members of a profession
- belief that health related information about individual patients should not be revealed to others
- Arrts mandatory standards of minimally acceptable professional conduct
- Ethical reflections that emphasize an intimate personal relationship value system that includes such virtues as sympathy compassion fidelity and love
- relationship that exsist when two mutually dependent groups in a society recognize certain expectation of each other
- Situations requiring moral judgement between two or more equally problem fraught alternatives
- beleif that individual rights provide the vital protection of life
- Strict observance of promises or duties
- caring for
- Gross violation of commonly help standards of decency of human rights
- traits of character that are socially valued such as courage
- belief that the worth of actions is determined by their ends or consequences
- belief system based on a set of moral principles that are embedded in a common morality
- General universal guides to action that are derived from so called basic moral truths that should be respected
Down
- Bodies of systematically related moral principle used to resolved ethical dilemmas
- Statements of right conduct governing individual actions
- Equitable fair or just conduct in dealing with others
- internal controls of a profession based on human values or moral principles
- publicy displayed ethical conduct of a profession usually embedded in a code of ethic
- practice behaviors that are defined by members of a profession
- ethical principle that places high value on avoiding harm to others
- duty to tell the truth and avoid deception
- use of moral principles as a basis for defending a chosen path of action
- obligations placed on individuals groups and institutions by reason of the so called moral bond of our interdependence with others
- Regulations established by government
- Doing good of
- Rights of individual or groups that are established and guaranteed by law
- justified claims that an individual can make on individuals groups or society
- systematic study of rightness and wrongness of human conduct and character as known by natural reason
- Person self reliance independence liberty rights privacy individual choice freedom of will
- ideals and customs of a society towards which the member of a group have an affective regard
- Basis for rights based ethical theory
- collection or set of values that an individual or group has as each persons personal guide
- Belief that action themselves rather than consquences determine the worth of actions
39 Clues: caring for • Doing good of • Regulations established by government • Basis for rights based ethical theory • Strict observance of promises or duties • duty to tell the truth and avoid deception • Standards set by individual or groups of individuals • Equitable fair or just conduct in dealing with others • Statements of right conduct governing individual actions • ...
Scientific Revolution 2021-10-06
Across
- these people dominated science for almost 2,000 until the scientific revolution came about
- a theory stating that knowledge comes only from sensory experience
- discovered the scientific method
- a period of drastic scientific change
- created deductive reasoning and geometry
- what goes up must come down
- 2nd step in scientific method; form a __
Down
- led scientists to study the natural world more closely
- the theory that the earth revolves around the sun
- came up with the laws of planetary motion
- inventor of the telescope, microscope, and thermometer
- the new method to investigation and discovery
- defined the laws of gravity and motion
- presented the heliocentric theory over the geocentric
14 Clues: what goes up must come down • discovered the scientific method • a period of drastic scientific change • defined the laws of gravity and motion • created deductive reasoning and geometry • 2nd step in scientific method; form a __ • came up with the laws of planetary motion • the new method to investigation and discovery • the theory that the earth revolves around the sun • ...
Continental Drift, Plate Tectonics, and Pangea 2023-06-05
Across
- Creates after plate tectonics collide together and spews lava
- Big chunks of ice that can explain Pangea. 290 million year old glacial groves were found in India, Africa, Australia, and South America.
- A theory that The world was a super continent, and that the continents we know now once spread apart
- When Plate Tectonics slide past each other.
- A super continent in the southern hemisphere.
- A super continent in the northern hemisphere.
- A theory proven by scientists that implies there once was a super continent
- Captain who used an echo sounder to search the ocean floor
Down
- Most obvious pieces of evidence for the theory Continental Drift.
- Cycle at which the crust moves and separates.
- The scientists who created the Pangea theory
- Under water ridge located in the mid Atlantic
- Pieces of the earth;'s crust that move slowly
13 Clues: When Plate Tectonics slide past each other. • The scientists who created the Pangea theory • Cycle at which the crust moves and separates. • A super continent in the southern hemisphere. • Under water ridge located in the mid Atlantic • Pieces of the earth;'s crust that move slowly • A super continent in the northern hemisphere. • ...
AP Psych Unit 3 2023-11-30
Across
- the decreased responsiveness to stimuli due to constant simulation
- the sense which tells us where our bodies are oriented in space
- how you experience stuff
- the pitch theory which says all hairs vibrate but each at different speeds
- the phenomenon in which a person can focus their listening on a single speaker among background noises and other conversations
- the pitch theory which says different hairs vibrate in the cochlea for different pitches
- transforming signals into neutral impulses
- the vision theory which says we have three types of cones which make up other colors
Down
- the vision theory which says sensory receptors come in pairs
- the sense which tells us where our body parts are
- interpretation of what comes to you
- the type of sense which includes vision, hearing, and taste
- the type of sense which includes smell and taste
13 Clues: how you experience stuff • interpretation of what comes to you • transforming signals into neutral impulses • the type of sense which includes smell and taste • the sense which tells us where our body parts are • the type of sense which includes vision, hearing, and taste • the vision theory which says sensory receptors come in pairs • ...
Criminology Crossword 2025-09-28
Across
- Jacobs linked this extra chromosome to aggression
- Theory suggesting crime is learned through family and peers
- Term used when someone is branded as “deviant” by society
- Bandura’s theory of crime emphasising modelling and imitation
- Psychologist who argued that prolonged separation from the mother in early childhood could lead to criminal behaviour
Down
- Personality trait in Eysenck’s theory linked to being outgoing and thrill-seeking
- Merton’s theory where blocked opportunities lead to crime
- Criminologist who argued criminals are “born, not made”
- Theory that sees crime as a result of inequality in capitalism
- Research method often used to test genetic influences on crime by comparing twins
10 Clues: Jacobs linked this extra chromosome to aggression • Criminologist who argued criminals are “born, not made” • Merton’s theory where blocked opportunities lead to crime • Term used when someone is branded as “deviant” by society • Theory suggesting crime is learned through family and peers • Bandura’s theory of crime emphasising modelling and imitation • ...
n633 week 4 2018-09-05
Across
- serves as the basis for regulations affecting research sponsored by the U.S. government
- theory that focuses on processes, social structures, social interactions
- often an asterix, expands a search term to include all forms of a root word
- pseudo-intervention presumed to have no therapeutic effect
Down
- nursing honor society
- specifies the operations a researcher must perform to measure it
- ethical duty to mimize harm and maximize benefits
- set of interventions to treat or prevent a specific cluster of symptoms
8 Clues: nursing honor society • ethical duty to mimize harm and maximize benefits • pseudo-intervention presumed to have no therapeutic effect • specifies the operations a researcher must perform to measure it • set of interventions to treat or prevent a specific cluster of symptoms • theory that focuses on processes, social structures, social interactions • ...
THE GUPTA EMPIRE 2022-12-20
Across
- the study of numbers
- a theory or set of values by which one lives;the search for wisdom and knowledge
- a poem composed over hundreds of years, reached it's final form during the Gupta era
- a territory that is part of a country or an empire
Down
- the greatest ancient Indian paintings;cave murals
- the first ruler of the Gupta empire
- a period of great happiness, prosperity and achievement
- a place where students get to learn great knowledge
8 Clues: the study of numbers • the first ruler of the Gupta empire • the greatest ancient Indian paintings;cave murals • a territory that is part of a country or an empire • a place where students get to learn great knowledge • a period of great happiness, prosperity and achievement • a theory or set of values by which one lives;the search for wisdom and knowledge • ...
Unit 1 Discrete Mathematics 2024-07-15
Across
- Set of all elements in a problem.
- Simplest type of proof.
- Logical equivalent of converse.
- When sets have no intersection.
- Method in which set is written using a formula.
- Graphical representation of set problem.
- A set which is a part of another set
Down
- Collection of unordered, distinct and we'll defined objects.
- Set of only common elements of operand sets.
- Method in which elements of a set are directly listed.
- Set of all elements not in given set.
- Set of all elements of operand sets.
- Set that contains elements belonging to operand sets but not their intersection.
- Sets that have 2^n elements.
- Number of elements in a set.
- Logical equivalent of implication.
16 Clues: Simplest type of proof. • Sets that have 2^n elements. • Number of elements in a set. • Logical equivalent of converse. • When sets have no intersection. • Set of all elements in a problem. • Logical equivalent of implication. • Set of all elements of operand sets. • A set which is a part of another set • Set of all elements not in given set. • ...
Change theory 2013-06-01
Across
- a reason people resist change
- a factor that influences how well an organisation manages change
- key element for successful change
- the process of moving through change
- a common problem encountered when trying to bring in change
- The process of preparing an organisation for change
Down
- ------- are our friends
- a process to generate ideas
- moving from a present state to a future state
- developed a three stage change theory in the 1940's
10 Clues: ------- are our friends • a process to generate ideas • a reason people resist change • key element for successful change • the process of moving through change • moving from a present state to a future state • developed a three stage change theory in the 1940's • The process of preparing an organisation for change • ...
Kinetic Theory 2014-04-01
Across
- The main form of heat transfer in solids
- The main form of heat transfer in liquids and gases
- State of matter where particles are attracted close together and in a fixed arrangement
- Can be emitted by solids, liquids and gases
- They can move freely inside the metal
Down
- Used to heat a room and also in some domestic hot water systems
- Material which does not conduct heat or energy very well
- Very good conductors
- State of matter with almost no forces of attraction between the particles
- State of matter with weak forces of attraction between the particles
10 Clues: Very good conductors • They can move freely inside the metal • The main form of heat transfer in solids • Can be emitted by solids, liquids and gases • The main form of heat transfer in liquids and gases • Material which does not conduct heat or energy very well • Used to heat a room and also in some domestic hot water systems • ...
Audience Theory 2014-05-14
Across
- Stuart Hall was the theorist who created encoding and ___ idea
- when the audience is this they are prone to the cultivation theory
- uses and grats theory, actively accessing a media text for escapism
- when the mode of address is personal, as if the text is speaking to you
- reader shares the programme's code and ideology
Down
- uses & grats theory, actively accessing a text to self educate or learn something new.
- when the reader rejects the programmes code and interprets the text differently
- the reader partially shares the programme's code and ideology
- newspapers adopt this mode of address when discussing serious issues
- this can affect the way an audience reacts to a text
10 Clues: reader shares the programme's code and ideology • this can affect the way an audience reacts to a text • the reader partially shares the programme's code and ideology • Stuart Hall was the theorist who created encoding and ___ idea • when the audience is this they are prone to the cultivation theory • ...
Learning Theory 2014-11-03
Across
- Dollard and Miller estimated an infant is fed this many times in their first year
- Operant conditioning states that behaviour that is this will be repeated
- This man did research into classical conditioning
- The stimuli or reaction that is natural and automatic
- According to the theory, both operant conditioning and classical conditioning both cause the infant to learn through this
- Schaffer and Emerson found in 1969 that this percentage of infants were attached to their mother and not their caregiver
Down
- The stimuli or reaction that is programmed through conditioning
- The man who's monkey experiment is evidence against classical conditioning
- The name given to the infant who was classically conditioned to hate lab rats
- There is an operant and a classical version of this
10 Clues: This man did research into classical conditioning • There is an operant and a classical version of this • The stimuli or reaction that is natural and automatic • The stimuli or reaction that is programmed through conditioning • Operant conditioning states that behaviour that is this will be repeated • ...
Skinner's Theory 2016-10-27
10 Clues: formality • more personable • the food and rat • behaviour modification • job loss or pay decrease • undesirable working hours • intrigued by human's behavior • drying wet hands or taking a shower • marie gives John a raise for being on time • companies/celebrities/media stop endorsing trends
Colour Theory 2020-03-25
Across
- Using only one colour.
- The level of warmth or coolness within a colour.
- A shade or colour.
- A colour and the two sitting either side on the colour wheel.
- Red,blue or yellow.
- Colours like green, blue and purple.
Down
- A colour made by mixing primary colours.
- Colours that sit opposite each other on the colour wheel like blue and orange.
- Colours like red, orange and yellow.
- A colour made by mixing equal amounts of a primary and secondary colours.
10 Clues: A shade or colour. • Red,blue or yellow. • Using only one colour. • Colours like red, orange and yellow. • Colours like green, blue and purple. • A colour made by mixing primary colours. • The level of warmth or coolness within a colour. • A colour and the two sitting either side on the colour wheel. • ...
Particle Theory 2021-02-07
Across
- touching but in no order
- the transition of a substance directly from the solid to the gas state without passing through the liquid state.
- melting point for pure water
- has lots of internal energy
- boiling point for pure water
- the change from a gas to a liquid
Down
- when the internal energy of a solid increases
- the rapid vaporisation of a liquid
- vibrate in a fixed position
- when a liquid changes to a solid when it is put below its freezing point
10 Clues: touching but in no order • vibrate in a fixed position • has lots of internal energy • melting point for pure water • boiling point for pure water • the change from a gas to a liquid • the rapid vaporisation of a liquid • when the internal energy of a solid increases • when a liquid changes to a solid when it is put below its freezing point • ...
