theory of the firm Crossword Puzzles
Famous Physicists 2025-10-09
Across
- Known for his discovery of the exclusion principle.
- Known for creating the first electric telegraph.
- Known for his cat.
- Known for creating alternating current.
- Known for detecting and producing X-rays.
- Known for inventing the first atomic bomb.
- Known for creating the first artificial nuclear reactor.
- Known for his uncertainty principle.
- Known for proving the existence of electromagnetic waves.
- Known for his discovery of energy quanta.
- Known as the father of nuclear physics.
- Known for his discovery of the electron.
- Known for his work on black holes and cosmology.
Down
- Known for the classical theory of electromagnetic radiation.
- Known for helping found the study of quantum mechanics, hint he was British.
- Known for his theory of stellar nucleosynthesis.
- Known for his theory of relativity.
- Known for inventing the electric battery.
- Known for her work on radioactivity.
- Known for his path integral formulation of quantum mechanics.
- Known for his telescope.
- Known for his work on atomic structure.
- Known for his work on magnetism and electricity.
- Known for his work on gravity.
- Known for his discovery of the neutron.
- Known for helping discover nuclear fission and for being the second woman to earn a doctorate in physics from the University of Vienna.
- Known for his law of elasticity.
27 Clues: Known for his cat. • Known for his telescope. • Known for his work on gravity. • Known for his law of elasticity. • Known for his theory of relativity. • Known for her work on radioactivity. • Known for his uncertainty principle. • Known for creating alternating current. • Known for his work on atomic structure. • Known for his discovery of the neutron. • ...
group theory 2024-11-04
Across
- Two elements x and y are ___ if gxg^-1 = y for some element in the group.
- A cube and an octahedron are these types of solids.
- Known as a partial converse to Lagrange's theorem; a subgroup with an order that is a prime divisor of the order of the original group always exists.
- The subgroup of a group is denoted by this symbol.
- A type of group that describes the symmetries of a polygon.
- The field of mathematics that is dealing with groups.
- A property of two groups that are one-to-one and have the same multiplication operation.
- A division of a set into disjoint sets whose union is the entire set.
- A type of commutative group.
- The set of all numbers denoted by a capital Z.
- The theory that connects field theory and group theory.
- This is the set of all images of an element in the set as g varies through the original group to produce another set called the orbit of x.
- All groups are isomorphic to a subgroup of some permutation group.
- A subset of the original set that forms a group under the same multiplication operation.
- The five solids that are considered to be "regular".
- This is a homomorphism from a group to the group of permutations of a set.
- A transformation that keeps the original shape unchanged.
- The rotational symmetry of a cube is isomorphic to that of S#___ where S is the permutation group of the answer.
- A function that maps one group to another group that is isomorphic to it.
- The number of symmetries of a tetrahedron.
- The order of any subgroup is a divisor of the order of the original group.
- A group consisting of the integers modulo n exists only if n obeys this property.
- A group with elements consisting of (0, 0), (0, 1), (1, 0), (1, 1).
- A set with a multiplication operation.
- This is similar to an isomorphism except it does not have to be a bijection.
Down
- One of the three group axioms.
- The dual solid of an icosahedron.
- The Lorentz group is one example of this.
- A bijection from one set to itself.
- This is the group of all g that leave x fixed if x is a part of the set.
- This is a subgroup of the permutation group.
- A one-to-one correspondence from one set onto another.
- The group G contains at least one subgroup of order p^m where p is a prime number that divides |G| and m is the highest power of p such that p^m divides |G|.
- This is the number of group axioms that there are.
- Any two subgroups that have an order of p^m are conjugate.
- This is the set of all elements that are mapped to the identity element in the new group.
- The rotational symmetry group of a dodecahedron is isomorphic to that of the A#___ where A denotes the alternating group of this number.
- The basic accepted truths that form a theory.
- The number of subgroups that have an order of p^m is congruent to one modulo p and is also a factor of |G| / p^m.
- The "superset" of group theory and also ring theory.
- A group in special relativity that represents the set of all possible transformations of spacetime.
41 Clues: A type of commutative group. • One of the three group axioms. • The dual solid of an icosahedron. • A bijection from one set to itself. • A set with a multiplication operation. • The Lorentz group is one example of this. • The number of symmetries of a tetrahedron. • This is a subgroup of the permutation group. • The basic accepted truths that form a theory. • ...
Economics Max 2024-03-12
Across
- factors that make it difficult to enter a market
- the ability to control prices
- the idea that every customer has a maximum price that they would pay
- enables a monopolistically competitive seller to profit from the differences between their product and the competitors
- agreement to illegally set prices and production levels
- also known as perfect competition
- agreement to sell at a similar price
- the government no longer decides what role each company can play
- companies in the same market but their products aren't identical
- a monopoly created by the government
- a market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all the output
Down
- Factors that cause costs to drop and production to rise
- expenses that a business must pay before it can begin production
- a product that is considered the same regardless of whoever makes them
- competition for the lowest price
- granting firms the right to operate a business
- gives a company exclusive rights to sell a new good or service
- an agreement among firms to coordinate prices and production
- similar to a cartel
- when a market is dominated by a few firms
- when competitors cut their prices to win business
- local authority gives a single firm rights to sell there goods
- when two companies join to make a single firm
- laws government policies
- a single seller that controls an entire market
25 Clues: similar to a cartel • laws government policies • the ability to control prices • competition for the lowest price • also known as perfect competition • agreement to sell at a similar price • a monopoly created by the government • when a market is dominated by a few firms • when two companies join to make a single firm • granting firms the right to operate a business • ...
NurseWord Puzzle 2021-12-14
Across
- “To accept the _______ possible goals”
- A composite of thoughts & feelings which constitute a person’s awareness of his individual existence, his conception of who and what he is.
- It is a method by which nurse acts in using nursing theory.
- There is _________ GRASP of the situation and as being able to identify the region of the problem without losing time considering a range of alternative diagnoses and solutions.
- It means love and charity, eros and agape are united, and caritas is by nature unconditional love.
- It is promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing response.
- The another term of resolution.
- What is the second of the 10 basic conditioning factors affecting the value of therapeutic self-care demand in Dorothea Orem Theory?
- It describes the unpredictable but continuous, nonlinear evolution of energy field as evidenced by nonrepeating rhythmicities.
- What is the first of the 5 Physiologic Needs of Callista Roy Theory?
Down
- In what role, that nurses help client clarify domains of dependence, interdependence, and independence and acts on client’s behalf as advocate. Figuratively standing in for a person in the patient's life.
- _________; perceived by the person.
- In the terms in transcultural nursing of Madeleine M. Leininger, _______ composed of people who have a distinct identity but are related to a larger cultural group.
- A transactional process characterized by active, reciprocal relations in defining, validating, and accepting the directions of individuals within an organization.
- In what skills acquisition in nursing of Patricia Benner, that nurses develop new rules and reasoning procedures for a plan while applying learned rules?
- It refers to a specialized field of practice founded on the theoretical structure of the science or knowledge of the discipline and accompanying practice abilities.
- The ________ theoretical position was influenced by the Columbia.
- Whose theory is this belong? “The Phenomenon of Caring: Importance, Research Questions, and Theoretical Considerations”
- Where was Florence Nightingale born?
19 Clues: The another term of resolution. • _________; perceived by the person. • Where was Florence Nightingale born? • “To accept the _______ possible goals” • It is a method by which nurse acts in using nursing theory. • The ________ theoretical position was influenced by the Columbia. • It is promotes helping behavior that calls for a nurturing response. • ...
Theory Game 2023-10-02
Across
- Children reproduce observed behaviors
- Theory built off of Behavioral theory which holds that new behaviors are acquired by observing and imitating others
- Theory that believes behavior is a function of the environment
- Example of classroom management platform to monitor student behavior, improve student engagement, and communicate with parents
- Creator of Social Learning Theory
- Used to encourage good behavior in classrooms
- Thinking about thinking and learning how to learn- developable and most effective way to learn
- Gaining information and storing it for later use
Down
- Creator of Behaviorism
- Eliciting a desired behavior
- Learning through observation (Children see the consequences experienced by others)
- Learning method where behaviors are modified in response to rewards or punishment
- Goals of teachers when giving students rewards for good behaviors
- What a cat would pull to get food after seeing it occur
14 Clues: Creator of Behaviorism • Eliciting a desired behavior • Creator of Social Learning Theory • Children reproduce observed behaviors • Used to encourage good behavior in classrooms • Gaining information and storing it for later use • What a cat would pull to get food after seeing it occur • Theory that believes behavior is a function of the environment • ...
6.2 Spelling Words 2026-01-05
Nurseword Puzzle 2022-12-01
Across
- Changing or converting something to another form
- A subsystem that promotes helping behaviour that calls for a nurturing response
- It speaks about attainment of goal and effectiveness of nursing care
- Refers to the events that produce stress
- A nonlinear domain without spatial or temporal attributes
- She developed the “ Conservation Model”
- An art, helping service and a technology
- It is described as the building block of a theory
- She is considered as “The Nightingale of Modern Nursing” (Last name only)
- A supposition or system of ideas that is proposed to explain a given phenomenon
- Often called "the Lady with the lamp"
- Described as nursing interventions that lessens the patient’s suffering
- This canon is accomplished with cards, flowers, pictures, or books
- She considered nursing as a science and practice that expands adaptive abilities and enhances person and environment transformation (First name only)
- It refers to the stimulus most immediately confronting the person, and it attracts the most attention.
- It is a type of concept that is indirectly observed or intangible
- Represented by setting goals and making decisions about and being agreed on the means to achieve goal
- This phase involves sharing other’s psychological state by standing apart and not sharing feelings
- Refers to the forces outside the organism in context of socially –approved way of living
- Developed the theory of Human-to-Human Relationship Model (Last name only)
Down
- Refers to the state of going back to actual state of health before the illness occurred
- It is in this phase where the individual may make minor requests or attention – getting techniques
- Statement that specifies the relationship or connection of factual concepts or phenomena
- She developed the “ Theory of Culture Care Diversity and Universality”
- She developed the “ Behavioral System Model”
- This stage involves the actual activities to achieve goals
- This subsystem creates defensive responses from the individual when life or territory is threatened
- It refers to a feeling of displeasure
- She developed the “Science of Unitary Human Beings Nursing Conceptual Model”
- It refers to the holistic level of wellness that the person experiences
- Involves the concept of mothering and provide for teaching and learning activities
- She developed the “Caritative Caring Theory”
- The goal of this prevention is to protect people from developing disease or experiencing an injury
- She was the first director of Loeb Center for Nursing and Rehabilitation (first name only)
- Means that caring is an endeavour to mediate faith, hope, and love
- A process where a person reaches the highest level of consciousness
- The malignant phase of dispairful “not caring” and apathetic indifference.
- It is concealed for hidden faced by the patient, or family which the nurse can assist him or them to meet through the performance of her professional functions
- She developed the “Twenty – One Nursing Problems”
- She developed the “ Theory of Health as Expanding Consciousness”
40 Clues: It refers to a feeling of displeasure • Often called "the Lady with the lamp" • She developed the “ Conservation Model” • Refers to the events that produce stress • An art, helping service and a technology • She developed the “ Behavioral System Model” • She developed the “Caritative Caring Theory” • Changing or converting something to another form • ...
3/24 A2 Micro Glossary 2023-03-23
Across
- the combinations of two goods that can be purchased with given income and given prices.
- where a firm grows by producing backwards or forwards in its supply chain.
- restrictions that prevent new firms entering an industry.
- where with falling long-run average costs, it makes sense to have only one firm providing the good or service.
- influencing choice by 'nudging' individuals towards making more effective decisions.
- a market where entry is free and exit is costless.
- a type of inferior good where the quantity demanded falls as price falls and the quantity demanded increases as price increases.
- where it is impossible to make someone better off without making someone else worse off.
Down
- where, following a price change, a consumer will substitute the cheaper good for the one that is now relatively more expensive.
- the satisfaction received from consumption.
- where an individual or a family are better off on means-tested benefits rather than working.
- the addition to total cost when making one extra unit of output.
- a formal agreement between firms to limit competition by limiting output or fixing prices.
- an organisation of workers that aims to protect and enhance the well-being of its members through collective negotiations with employers and government.
- a cost of production that is just sufficient for a firm to keep operating in a particular industry.
15 Clues: the satisfaction received from consumption. • a market where entry is free and exit is costless. • restrictions that prevent new firms entering an industry. • the addition to total cost when making one extra unit of output. • where a firm grows by producing backwards or forwards in its supply chain. • ...
Crossword 5 2025-02-14
Across
- Hirschi critiqued differential association theory, arguing that crime isn’t something people need to learn because it’s ____.
- Sykes & Matza argued that there were no fundamental differences between delinquents and non-delinquents; that even the worst delinquents spent most of their time engaging in ____ behavior.
- What goal orientation is to Reckless, ____ is to Hirschi.
- Despite his claim that it’s a ____ theory of crime, Hirschi only tested his social bond theory on White high schoolers from a single county in California.
- Research shows that low self-control increases the likelihood of engaging in criminal behavior, but it’s also a consistent predictor of ____.
- The act of gathering supplies and making plans to survive the collapse of civilization
- Hagan and colleagues define a ____ family as one where girls are kept under close supervision whereas boys are allowed to run free and get in trouble.
- Gottfredson & Hirschi argued that self-control was a ____ trait; a person who has low self-control at the age of 12 will still have low self-control at the age of 60.
- Whereas Merton blamed high aspiration for crime, Hirschi blamed ____ aspiration.
- Whereas Merton defined anomie as the breakdown in social norms, Durkheim defined it as the collapse of social ____.
- What belief is to Hirschi, ____ ____ is to Reckless.
Down
- According to Cooley, it is by developing a ____ ____ that we become integrated into society.
- Walter Reckless’ ____ theory sought to explain why most people who get exposed to adverse life circumstances don’t commit crimes.
- ____-____ is defined as the ability to delay gratification (ignore the hyphen)
- In his drift theory, Matza argued that most juvenile delinquents will eventually ____ out of criminal behavior.
- Control theorists argue that people naturally gravitate towards immediate ____.
- Rather than asking why people commit crime, control theories ask why people ____.
- The famous ____ experiment demonstrated the far-reaching effects of self-control in children.
- According to Sykes & Matza, if a person argues that they committed a crime for a noble reason, they are appealing to ____ ____.
- Which element of Hirschi’s social bond is associated with the motto, “idle hands are the devil’s workshop?”
- Hirschi argued that individuals who have a stronger ____ to society are less likely to commit crimes.
21 Clues: What belief is to Hirschi, ____ ____ is to Reckless. • What goal orientation is to Reckless, ____ is to Hirschi. • ____-____ is defined as the ability to delay gratification (ignore the hyphen) • Control theorists argue that people naturally gravitate towards immediate ____. • Whereas Merton blamed high aspiration for crime, Hirschi blamed ____ aspiration. • ...
Crossword 5 2025-02-13
Across
- Hirschi critiqued differential association theory, arguing that crime isn’t something people need to learn because it’s ____.
- Sykes & Matza argued that there were no fundamental differences between delinquents and non-delinquents; that even the worst delinquents spent most of their time engaging in ____ behavior.
- What goal orientation is to Reckless, ____ is to Hirschi.
- Despite his claim that it’s a ____ theory of crime, Hirschi only tested his social bond theory on White high schoolers from a single county in California.
- Research shows that low self-control increases the likelihood of engaging in criminal behavior, but it’s also a consistent predictor of ____.
- The act of gathering supplies and making plans to survive the collapse of civilization
- Hagan and colleagues define a ____ family as one where girls are kept under close supervision whereas boys are allowed to run free and get in trouble.
- Gottfredson & Hirschi argued that self-control was a ____ trait; a person who has low self-control at the age of 12 will still have low self-control at the age of 60.
- Whereas Merton blamed high aspiration for crime, Hirschi blamed ____ aspiration.
- Whereas Merton defined anomie as the breakdown in social norms, Durkheim defined it as the collapse of social ____.
- What belief is to Hirschi, ____ ____ is to Reckless.
Down
- According to Cooley, it is by developing a ____ ____ that we become integrated into society.
- Walter Reckless’ ____ theory sought to explain why most people who get exposed to adverse life circumstances don’t commit crimes.
- ____-____ is defined as the ability to delay gratification (ignore the hyphen)
- In his drift theory, Matza argued that most juvenile delinquents will eventually ____ out of criminal behavior.
- Control theorists argue that people naturally gravitate towards immediate ____.
- Rather than asking why people commit crime, control theories ask why people ____.
- The famous ____ experiment demonstrated the far-reaching effects of self-control in children.
- According to Sykes & Matza, if a person argues that they committed a crime for a noble reason, they are appealing to ____ ____.
- Which element of Hirschi’s social bond is associated with the motto, “idle hands are the devil’s workshop?”
- Hirschi argued that individuals who have a stronger ____ to society are less likely to commit crimes.
21 Clues: What belief is to Hirschi, ____ ____ is to Reckless. • What goal orientation is to Reckless, ____ is to Hirschi. • ____-____ is defined as the ability to delay gratification (ignore the hyphen) • Control theorists argue that people naturally gravitate towards immediate ____. • Whereas Merton blamed high aspiration for crime, Hirschi blamed ____ aspiration. • ...
Crossword 5 2026-02-18
Across
- According to Cooley, it is by developing a ____ ____ that we become integrated into society.
- Sykes & Matza argued that there were no fundamental differences between delinquents and non-delinquents; that even the worst delinquents spent most of their time engaging in ____ behavior.
- ____ theorists assume that humans are a blank slate.
- The famous ____ experiment demonstrated the far-reaching effects of self-control in children.
- Gottfredson & Hirschi argued that self-control was a ____ trait; a person who has low self-control at the age of 12 will still have low self-control at the age of 60.
- Rather than asking why people commit crime, control theories ask why people ____.
- Control theorists argue that people naturally gravitate towards immediate ____.
- Hirschi argued that individuals who have a stronger ____ to society are less likely to commit crimes.
- According to Sykes & Matza, if a person argues that they committed a crime for a noble reason, they are appealing to ____ ____.
- Hagan and colleagues define a ____ family as one where girls are kept under close supervision whereas boys are allowed to run free and get in trouble.
- Which element of Hirschi’s social bond is associated with the motto, “idle hands are the devil’s workshop?”
- What belief is to Hirschi, ____ ____ is to Reckless.
Down
- Whereas Merton defined anomie as the breakdown in social norms, Durkheim defined it as the collapse of social ____.
- What goal orientation is to Reckless, ____ is to Hirschi.
- Despite his claim that it’s a ____ theory of crime, Hirschi only tested his social bond theory on White high schoolers from a single county in California.
- Walter Reckless’ ____ theory sought to explain why most people who get exposed to adverse life circumstances don’t commit crimes.
- ____-____ is defined as the ability to delay gratification (ignore the hyphen)
- Hirschi critiqued differential association theory, arguing that crime isn’t something people need to learn because it’s ____.
- The act of gathering supplies and making plans to survive the collapse of civilization
- Research shows that low self-control increases the likelihood of engaging in criminal behavior, but it’s also a consistent predictor of ____.
- Whereas Merton blamed high aspiration for crime, Hirschi blamed ____ aspiration.
- In his drift theory, Matza argued that most juvenile delinquents will eventually ____ out of criminal behavior.
22 Clues: ____ theorists assume that humans are a blank slate. • What belief is to Hirschi, ____ ____ is to Reckless. • What goal orientation is to Reckless, ____ is to Hirschi. • ____-____ is defined as the ability to delay gratification (ignore the hyphen) • Control theorists argue that people naturally gravitate towards immediate ____. • ...
Ethics and Values 2024-05-16
Across
- Ethics: The study of ethical issues surrounding human interaction with the environment and non-human entities.
- An ethical theory that focuses on the inherent rightness or wrongness of actions themselves, rather than the consequences.
- The branch of philosophy that deals with moral principles and values.
- Consent: Permission granted with full knowledge of the possible consequences, typically given by a patient to a doctor for treatment with knowledge of the risks involved.
- Ethics: The study of ethical principles and moral or ethical problems that arise in a business environment.
- Egoism: The belief that individuals should act in their own self-interest, even at the expense of others.
- The belief in or practice of disinterested and selfless concern for the well-being of others.
- Adherence to moral and ethical principles, honesty, and uprightness of character.
- The study of ethical issues arising from advances in biology and medicine.
- Principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong behavior.
Down
- of Interest: A situation in which a person's or organization's private interests may influence their judgment or actions in their official capacity.
- Keeping information private and only sharing it with authorized individuals.
- Relativism: The belief that moral principles are not universal and can vary depending on cultural, societal, or personal factors.
- terms cover various aspects of ethics and ethical decision-making. Let me know if you need more information on any of them!
- The act of exposing wrongdoing or unethical behavior within an organization.
- Ethics: The ethical standards and principles that govern the behavior of professionals in various fields, such as law, medicine, or engineering.
- An ethical theory that suggests the best action is the one that maximizes utility, often defined as maximizing happiness and reducing suffering.
- An ethical theory that argues the morality of an action is determined by its outcome or consequence.
- Absolutism: The belief that certain actions are inherently right or wrong, regardless of the context or consequences.
- Ethics: An ethical theory that emphasizes the character of the agent as the key element of moral thinking, rather than rules or consequences.
- Dilemma: A situation in which a difficult choice has to be made between two courses of action, both morally acceptable.
21 Clues: The branch of philosophy that deals with moral principles and values. • Principles concerning the distinction between right and wrong behavior. • The study of ethical issues arising from advances in biology and medicine. • Keeping information private and only sharing it with authorized individuals. • ...
Chapter 1 Review Puzzle 2013-05-01
Across
- The most influential social learning theory devised by Albert Bandura emphasized?
- Occurs after the research session is over.
- _______ is receiving increased attention as investigators look for ways to protect young people from damaging effects of stressful life conditions.
- In a _______ design, researchers gather information on individuals, generally in natural life circumstances, without altering their experiences.
- _______ influences are events that are irregular.
- This theory focuses on how culture- the values, beliefs, customs, and skills of a social group- is transmitted to the next generation.
- __________ is concerned with the adaptive value of behavior and its evolutionary history.
- Measures of behavior are taken on large numbers of individuals, and age related averages are computed to represent typical deveolpment in this approach.
- Who is the father of behaviorism?
- Compared to their agemates, adolescents from immigrant families are less likely to be ______.
- Today, __________ are the largest generation ever to enter middle age.
- Charles Darwin's theory of evolution emphasized _______ selection and survival of the fittest
- This perspective assumes development is lifelong, multidirectional, and plastic.
Down
- Research that combines _________ and developmental designs is increasingly common because it permits correlational and causal inferences.
- The ___________ view of development holds that infants and preschoolers respond to the world in much the same way as adults do.
- Theories are influenced by the _______ values and belief systems of their times.
- In ______ interviews, each individual is asked the same set of questions in the same way.
- In this design reaserchers are not concerned about difficulties as participant dropout or practice effects.
- Watson Concluded that _________ is the supreme force in development and that adults can mold children's behavior by carefully controlling stimulus.
- A major limitation of the Clinical interview has to do with ________.
- According to the cognitive-developmental theory, children _______ construct knowledge as they manipulate ans explore their world.
- A +.55 correlation is?
- How many months was little Albert in John B. Watson's experiement?
23 Clues: A +.55 correlation is? • Who is the father of behaviorism? • Occurs after the research session is over. • _______ influences are events that are irregular. • How many months was little Albert in John B. Watson's experiement? • A major limitation of the Clinical interview has to do with ________. • ...
47. Advanced Musical Analysis Terms 2025-08-18
Across
- Classification system for musical elements
- Study of signs and symbols in music
- Interpretation theory applied to musical meaning
- Theory analyzing musical styles and genres
- Study of storytelling aspects in music
- Theory analyzing relationships between chords
- Psychology of how we perceive musical wholes
Down
- Analysis of substitutable musical elements
- Philosophy influencing music's mathematical perfection
- Study of consciousness in musical experience
- Voice-leading principle of minimal movement
- Analytical method showing structural levels
- Classical principles applied to musical persuasion
- Analysis of references between musical works
- Harmonic space theory using triangular lattice
15 Clues: Study of signs and symbols in music • Study of storytelling aspects in music • Analysis of substitutable musical elements • Classification system for musical elements • Theory analyzing musical styles and genres • Voice-leading principle of minimal movement • Analytical method showing structural levels • Study of consciousness in musical experience • ...
Scientific Revolution Review Pt. 1 2020-05-02
Across
- The Age of ____ is when people went out to try to discover new lands.
- This explorer sailed West using Ptolemy's map and realized it was wrong, he landed in the Americas.
- This is the time period where people questioned views and ancient texts were translated. This was before the Scientific Revolution.
- Galileo was the first scientist to routinely use ___ to test his theories.
- He was a Polish astronomer who started the Scientific Revolution.
- He was a German astronomer who determined that the planets moved in an elliptical orbit.
- He was an Italian astronomer who was the first to study the sky with a telescope.
- The ____ theory was an ancient theory that stated that the Earth was at the center of the universe.
- This word means "knowledge" or "understanding" in Latin.
- This is a series of events that led to the birth of modern science.
Down
- The ____ theory was a theory proposed by Nicolaus Copernicus that stated that the Sun was at the center of the universe.
- This was a group of priests whose job it was to find and punish anyone going against church teachings, the Roman ___.
- Newton is known for identifying ___ theories. (spell the number)
- This man was a Danish astronomer who spent his life observing the stars. He charted 750 of them.
- One of the things Kepler discovered is that the human eye sees images ____ just like a camera.
- Galileo discovered four of the moons that orbited this planet.
- Galileo was accused of ___ and told to take back his teachings, which he eventually did.
- He was an English scientist who published Principia Mathematica.
18 Clues: This word means "knowledge" or "understanding" in Latin. • Galileo discovered four of the moons that orbited this planet. • Newton is known for identifying ___ theories. (spell the number) • He was an English scientist who published Principia Mathematica. • He was a Polish astronomer who started the Scientific Revolution. • ...
Laureniscooler 2022-12-07
Across
- found a vaccine for smallpox
- published the law of inverse gas pressure
- advocated pantheism
- believed men are born free
- found orbits are elliptical
- studied human anatomy
Down
- believed men could change the government
- Unitarian Minister
- applied mathematics to the study of the universe
- sun-centered theory
- father of chemistry
- well-known astronomer
- came up with a heliocentric theory
- studied the heart
14 Clues: studied the heart • Unitarian Minister • sun-centered theory • father of chemistry • advocated pantheism • well-known astronomer • studied human anatomy • believed men are born free • found orbits are elliptical • found a vaccine for smallpox • came up with a heliocentric theory • believed men could change the government • published the law of inverse gas pressure • ...
The Industrial Revolution 2017-02-22
Across
- an economic system that is based off capital
- a famous communist of the industrial revolution
- a group of wage earners that form for mutual aid and protection
- an overcrowded apartment of the industrial revolution
- a political and economic theory that is based on social organization
- a class between the upper and working class
- the workers movement in 1836 that was an attempt to get workers certain rights
- a NY women's rights convention was here
- Engels co-founder of the Marxist theory
- workers may do this for better pay or working conditions
- the negotiation of wages by a body of employees
- to take on the traits of a city
- this idea was formed by Karl Marx
Down
- the right to vote
- the middle class
- the belief that everyone was made and is equal
- Revolution the change agrarian to industrial society
- The New York______ Exchange
- people who opposed the use of machinery
- the development of industries within a nation
- a person that starts their own business
- the theory that sickness is caused by "germs"
- the idea that things should be left to take their course
- a company that is recognized as one entity by the law
- the belief that the best actions maximize utility
- an ideal and perfect place
- a person of the working class
- this device was made by Eli Whitney
28 Clues: the middle class • the right to vote • an ideal and perfect place • The New York______ Exchange • a person of the working class • to take on the traits of a city • this idea was formed by Karl Marx • this device was made by Eli Whitney • people who opposed the use of machinery • a person that starts their own business • a NY women's rights convention was here • ...
Biology 20 Review 2017-06-20
Across
- features/wisdom teeth, appendix, tailbone
- features/arm of human and leg of dog
- of the release of histamine
- created the theory of natural selection
- the theory of inheritance of acquired characteristics
- bicarbonate ions
- site for the krebs cycle
- polar molecule
- photosynthesis
- of the heart, during which blood is pushed out the heart
- of the heart, during which the atria fill with blood
- largest artery in the body
Down
- reproduction/results in the most variation between offspring
- land that drains toward a lake or other body of water
- features/wing of insect and wing of bird
- of evolution
- together for blood clotting
- of cellular respiration occurring in the cytoplasm
- positive/universal blood recipient
- frozen soil
- most digestion occurs
21 Clues: frozen soil • of evolution • polar molecule • photosynthesis • bicarbonate ions • most digestion occurs • site for the krebs cycle • largest artery in the body • together for blood clotting • of the release of histamine • positive/universal blood recipient • features/arm of human and leg of dog • created the theory of natural selection • features/wing of insect and wing of bird • ...
Biology crossword Puzzle 2023-10-04
Across
- The idea that evolution is a slow process
- Any group of animals that live together and reproduce.
- This part of DNA controls traits
- Difference between members of the same species
- Chimpanzees are humans are these to humans
- any trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce in its environment
- This theory is the main theory used by Scientists
Down
- Placing of events in the order in which they occurred without any relationship to the actual time during which any one event occurred
- A higher amount of this leads to a successful life while a lower leads to death
- A change in genetic material
- no longer on this planet
- This happens to species over time
- paleontologists study these
- This structure has little to no function
- Father of the theory of Evolution
15 Clues: no longer on this planet • paleontologists study these • A change in genetic material • This part of DNA controls traits • This happens to species over time • Father of the theory of Evolution • This structure has little to no function • The idea that evolution is a slow process • Chimpanzees are humans are these to humans • Difference between members of the same species • ...
Plate Tectonics 2024-02-08
Across
- stress that occurs when the forces act to squeeze an object
- Process of which new oceanic crust is formed
- created by transform boundaries.
- tectonic plates which include oceanic and continental
- properties that involve a reaction to various properties
- made of iron and nickel
- when the denser oceanic plate subducts under the continental plate
- makes up 1 percent of earth
- lower part of the mantle
- only liquid layer in the earth
Down
- theory developed by Alfred Wegner
- the theory explains how large pieces of the earth's crust move and change shapes
- plates sliding past each other
- Moving apart
- Colliding
- plastic like layer of earth
- makes up 66 percent of earth
- center of earth
- one of the two types of layers in the earth
19 Clues: Colliding • Moving apart • center of earth • made of iron and nickel • lower part of the mantle • plastic like layer of earth • makes up 1 percent of earth • makes up 66 percent of earth • plates sliding past each other • only liquid layer in the earth • created by transform boundaries. • theory developed by Alfred Wegner • one of the two types of layers in the earth • ...
Famous Scientists 2024-10-01
Across
- Inventor known for his work with electricity and the AC current.
- Pioneered research on radioactivity and won two Nobel Prizes.
- Astronomer who supported the heliocentric theory.
- Developed the theory of relativity.
- Formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection.
Down
- Developed pasteurization and contributed to germ theory.
- Famous for his work on black holes and author of 'A Brief History of Time'.
- Considered the first computer programmer.
- Founder of modern genetics through his study of pea plants.
- Physicist known for the laws of motion and gravity.
10 Clues: Developed the theory of relativity. • Considered the first computer programmer. • Astronomer who supported the heliocentric theory. • Physicist known for the laws of motion and gravity. • Developed pasteurization and contributed to germ theory. • Formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection. • Founder of modern genetics through his study of pea plants. • ...
The Learning Theory of Attachment: A01 2023-03-17
Across
- What does the caregiver become once associated with Food?
- In the nurture perspective what is it believed for children to be born with?
- Is the learning theory nature or nurture?
- What type of conditioning is learnt through association?
- What is the primary drive in attachment?
- What is the person who supplies the food called?
- Who applied the theory of Operant conditioning to attachment?
Down
- What is it called when you avoid a negative stimulus?
- What is described as a two way emotional bond between infant and caregiver?
- What is the negative stimulus the caregiver is trying to remove?
- What happens to the neutral stimulus and Unconditioned stimulus during conditioning?
- In attachment what is the unconditioned stimulus?
- What has happened when something has become conditioned?
- What is something that motivates behaviour?
- What motivates an attachment with an infant?
15 Clues: What is the primary drive in attachment? • Is the learning theory nature or nurture? • What is something that motivates behaviour? • What motivates an attachment with an infant? • What is the person who supplies the food called? • In attachment what is the unconditioned stimulus? • What is it called when you avoid a negative stimulus? • ...
Science A-to-Z 2022-10-04
Across
- study of postage stamps
- study of teaching
- study of cats
- study of ignorance
- study of fish
- study of the nose
- a fundamental theory in physics which describes nature at the smallest scales of energy levels of atoms and subatomic particles
- study of animal remains of archaeological sites
- study of the art of beautifying the hands or manicure
- study of the elderly and aging
- study of cactus spines grown in time ordered sequence
- study of sign language
- science of the intellect
- study of history
Down
- study of human movement and posture
- study of parasites that live inside larger organisms
- study of wood
- study of local climates
- study of butterflies and moths
- study of the philosophy or theory of law
- study of food
- study of the mouth
- study of flags
- study of cities
- study of words
- study of smells and olfactory processes
26 Clues: study of wood • study of cats • study of fish • study of food • study of flags • study of words • study of cities • study of history • study of teaching • study of the nose • study of ignorance • study of the mouth • study of sign language • study of postage stamps • study of local climates • science of the intellect • study of butterflies and moths • study of the elderly and aging • ...
Market Vocab 2022-03-09
Across
- A market structure characterized by only a few sellers of a product who dominate the market. (Example: breakfast cereals and natural gas)
- Is there any difference between the products sold by the sellers in the market for the good?
- A market structure characterized by a large number of buyer and sellers of an identical product. (Example: commodities like crude oil)
- A market structure characterized by only one seller of a product dominating the market. (Example: electrical power companies and cable television companies)
- The expense a firm must pay before it can produce and sell goods
- Money left over for a firm after covering both out of pocket expenses (explicit costs) and opportunity costs (implicit costs).
Down
- a large number of buyers and sellers of products that are similar to one another be can be differentiated by brand, quality, etc. (Example: restaurants and retail clothing sellers)
- Are firms in the market able to make economic profits (long-run) as well as accounting profits (short-run)?
- Can the firms in the market use methods other than price to attract customers?
- Division of customers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good
- The right to sell a good or service in an exclusive market
- The ability of a company to change prices and outputs in a market
- Money left over for a firm after covering out of pocket expenses (explicit costs).
- An agreement among firms to charge one price for the same good
- Are there many, few, or one seller(s) of the product?
- Are there any obstacles that prevent other firms from entering the market for the good?
- A license that gives the inventor of a new product the exclusive right to sell for a period of time
- Can the individual firms in the market for a product have any control over the price they charge?
18 Clues: Are there many, few, or one seller(s) of the product? • The right to sell a good or service in an exclusive market • An agreement among firms to charge one price for the same good • The expense a firm must pay before it can produce and sell goods • The ability of a company to change prices and outputs in a market • ...
Development Psychology: Emotional/Cognitive 2024-09-21
Across
- Created the psychosocial stages
- "social" reasoning
- the stage that develops from birth-2yrs
- discomfort with intimacy
- How many stages are in Piaget's Theory?
- dedication of an identity or set of values
- How many psychosocial stages?
- taking a break from real life to explore their identity
- created the psychosexual theory
Down
- stage of using mimic behaviors and symbols
- "killed his father to marry his mother"
- The person that created "contact comfort"
- trusting others and open to communication
- Does not really know "who" you are
- development of organized and rational thinking
- mother one the effects on temperament
- assimilation and accommodation
- fear of abandonment
18 Clues: "social" reasoning • fear of abandonment • discomfort with intimacy • How many psychosocial stages? • assimilation and accommodation • Created the psychosocial stages • created the psychosexual theory • Does not really know "who" you are • mother one the effects on temperament • "killed his father to marry his mother" • the stage that develops from birth-2yrs • ...
DNA CROSS WORD PUZZLE 2021-12-12
Across
- - He proposed the geocentric theory.
- - He proposed the heliocentric theory.
- - A scientist who studies objects in space, such as black holes, galaxies, moons, planets, stars, etc.
- - A proof of Big Bang theory that shows a change in frequency of waves of moving objects relative to its source.
- - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe.
- - A theory that says the universe began as a small point that expanded rapidly about 13.8 billion years ago.
- - Also called as space junk.
- - Are rocky objects revolving around the sun that are too small to be called planets.
Down
- - A model showing the Sun as a fixed point in the center of the universe with objects revolving around it.
- - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole.
- - Different beliefs about the universe just like a cosmic egg, a flat island divided by river, and a powerful being created everything.
- - A galaxy of no visible pattern.
- - The Sun together with the group of planets and other celestial bodies that revolve around it that are held by its gravitational attraction.
- - The path one object takes as it revolves around another object in space.
- - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun.
15 Clues: - Also called as space junk. • - A galaxy of no visible pattern. • - He proposed the geocentric theory. • - He proposed the heliocentric theory. • - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun. • - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe. • - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole. • ...
DNA CROSS WORD PUZZLE 2021-12-12
Across
- - He proposed the geocentric theory.
- - He proposed the heliocentric theory.
- - A scientist who studies objects in space, such as black holes, galaxies, moons, planets, stars, etc.
- - A proof of Big Bang theory that shows a change in frequency of waves of moving objects relative to its source.
- - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe.
- - A theory that says the universe began as a small point that expanded rapidly about 13.8 billion years ago.
- - Also called as space junk.
- - Are rocky objects revolving around the sun that are too small to be called planets.
Down
- - A model showing the Sun as a fixed point in the center of the universe with objects revolving around it.
- - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole.
- - Different beliefs about the universe just like a cosmic egg, a flat island divided by river, and a powerful being created everything.
- - A galaxy of no visible pattern.
- - The Sun together with the group of planets and other celestial bodies that revolve around it that are held by its gravitational attraction.
- - The path one object takes as it revolves around another object in space.
- - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun.
15 Clues: - Also called as space junk. • - A galaxy of no visible pattern. • - He proposed the geocentric theory. • - He proposed the heliocentric theory. • - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun. • - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe. • - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole. • ...
Unit 2 Part 1 - Sensation 2024-10-01
Across
- nerve that carries visual information to the brain
- the retina's point of central focus
- the eye's clear, protective outer layer, covering the pupil and iris
- region of the ear that contains the hammer, anvil, and stirrup
- region of the retina where the optic nerve leaves the eye
- physical dimension of light and sound that determines brightness and loudness, respectively
- color theory that the retina contains three different types of color receptors - red, green, and blue
- theory that the spinal cord contains a neurological "gate" that blocks pain signals or allows them to pass onto the brain
- theory that the region of maximum vibration along the basilar membrane is the basis of pitch
- theory of hearing that the rate of auditory nerve impulses matches the frequency of tones, enabling us to sense pitch
- term for color seen after staring at its opponent for a whole
- part of the eye that changes shape to focus images on the retina
Down
- adjustable opening in the eye through which light enters
- the sense of smell
- aspect of light and sound determined by the amplitude of energy waves
- type of deafness that results from damage in the mechanics of the outer or middle ear
- process by which our sensory receptors and nervous system receive and represent stimulus energies from our environment
- sense of the position and movement of body parts
- study of relations between the physical characteristics of stimuli and our psychological experience of them
- sense of hearing
- retinal receptors that detect black, white, and gray, and are sensitive to movement
- inner surface of the eye that contains the rods and cones
- color blindness when a person perceives two out of the three visual pigments
- region of the ear that contains the cochlea, semicircular canals, and vestibular sacs
- threshold that represents the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time
- ______-down processing is information processing guided by higher-level mental processes
26 Clues: sense of hearing • the sense of smell • the retina's point of central focus • sense of the position and movement of body parts • nerve that carries visual information to the brain • adjustable opening in the eye through which light enters • region of the retina where the optic nerve leaves the eye • inner surface of the eye that contains the rods and cones • ...
Activity 8 2023-11-01
Across
- Underwater mountain range formed by divergent boundaries.
- Tectonic plate submerged by an ocean.
- Theory that the continents are constantly moving.
- When magma flows out of gaps in divergent boundaries, adding a new floor to the seafloor.
- A long, narrow ditch caused by subduction at convergent boundaries.
- When one plate is forced beneath another.
- Where two plates move towards each other.
Down
- Outer part of the Earth, consisting of the crust and upper mantle.
- Where two plates slide laterally against each other.
- Tectonic plate consisting mainly of the Earth's crust.
- Scientist who proposed the theory of continental drift.
- Theory that the Earth's lithosphere is broken into "plates" that move.
- Where two plates move away from each other.
- Supercontinent that existed before the continents drifted apart.
- Opening in the sea floor where dark, heated, mineral-rich water flows.
15 Clues: Tectonic plate submerged by an ocean. • When one plate is forced beneath another. • Where two plates move towards each other. • Where two plates move away from each other. • Theory that the continents are constantly moving. • Where two plates slide laterally against each other. • Tectonic plate consisting mainly of the Earth's crust. • ...
Significant Scientific Discoveries of the 1990s 2023-06-29
Across
- Theory (Theoretical framework in physics)
- (Planets outside our solar system)
- (DNA amplification technique)
- (Manipulation of matter at the atomic and molecular scale)
- (Genetic material)
- (Subatomic particles with little mass and no charge)
- Genome (Complete set of human genes)
- (Zero electrical resistance)
Down
- (Gene editing technology)
- (Global computer network)
- Warming (Rise in Earth's temperature due to human activities)
- Theory (Sensitive dependence on initial conditions)
- (Asexual reproduction)
- Bang (Origin of the universe)
- (European Organization for Nuclear Research)
- (Space telescope)
- Cells (Undifferentiated cells with regenerative potential)
- (First cloned mammal)
- Matter (Unseen matter in the universe)
- (Human Immunodeficiency Virus)
20 Clues: (Space telescope) • (Genetic material) • (First cloned mammal) • (Asexual reproduction) • (Gene editing technology) • (Global computer network) • (Zero electrical resistance) • (DNA amplification technique) • Bang (Origin of the universe) • (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) • (Planets outside our solar system) • Genome (Complete set of human genes) • ...
Theory of evolution!! 2021-11-17
Across
- ,a change or the process of change by which an organism or species becomes better suited to its environment.
- of Evolution ,The theory of evolution is based on the idea that all species? are related and gradually change over time.
- ,Darwinism is a theory of biological evolution developed by the English naturalist Charles Darwin.
- ,the changing of the structure of a gene, resulting in a variant form that may be transmitted to subsequent generations.
- develop gradually, especially from a simple to a more complex form.
- ,A well-substantiated explanation of some aspect of the natural world, based on a body of facts that have been repeatedly confirmed through observation and experiment.
Down
- ,a change or difference in condition, amount, or level, typically with certain
- ,the notion that an organism can pass on to its offspring physical characteristics that the parent organism acquired through use or disuse during its lifetime.
- ,a group of living organisms consisting of similar individuals capable of exchanging genes or interbreeding.
- ,Inherited traits are passed from parent to offspring according to the rules of Mendelian genetics.
- Selection ,the process whereby organisms better adapted to their environment tend to survive and produce more offspring.
- hide or disguise the presence of.
12 Clues: hide or disguise the presence of. • develop gradually, especially from a simple to a more complex form. • ,a change or difference in condition, amount, or level, typically with certain • ,Darwinism is a theory of biological evolution developed by the English naturalist Charles Darwin. • ...
Theory of evolution 2021-11-17
Across
- , a theory of evolution based on the principle that physical changes in organisms during their lifetime.
- ,the action or process of adapting or being adapted.
- develop gradually, especially from a simple to a more complex form
- of Evolution ,based on the idea that all species? are related and gradually change over time
Down
- ,the disguising of military personnel, equipment, and installations by painting or covering them to make them blend in with their surroundings
- selection , the process whereby organisms better adapted to their environment tend to survive and produce more offspring
- , a group of living organisms consisting of similar individuals capable of exchanging genes or interbreeding
- , the action or process of adapting or being adapted
- ,a change or difference in condition, amount, or level, typically with certain limits
- , a supposition or a system of ideas intended to explain something, especially one based on general principles independent of the thing to be explained
- , relating to Darwinism.
- , receive (money, property, or a title) as an heir at the death of the previous holder
12 Clues: , relating to Darwinism. • , the action or process of adapting or being adapted • ,the action or process of adapting or being adapted. • develop gradually, especially from a simple to a more complex form • ,a change or difference in condition, amount, or level, typically with certain limits • ...
Theory of Evolution 2019-07-20
Across
- "..... don't evolve, instead evolutionary changes affect entire populations"
- In 1943 it was discovered that ... was a genetic material
- Evidence Darwin found whilst in Argentina
- Darwin's Theory of Evolution by Natural ....
- The island where Darwin formulated his ideas on finches
- Title of Darwin's famous book "The....of Species"
Down
- Theory whereby all living organisms are related (6,7)
- Alfred... was also a significant Naturalist
- The Peppered Moth changed as a result of the....revolution
- The ship Darwin sailed on for 5 years
- Changes can be PHENOTYPE or ...
11 Clues: Changes can be PHENOTYPE or ... • The ship Darwin sailed on for 5 years • Evidence Darwin found whilst in Argentina • Alfred... was also a significant Naturalist • Darwin's Theory of Evolution by Natural .... • Title of Darwin's famous book "The....of Species" • Theory whereby all living organisms are related (6,7) • ...
theory of evolution 2026-03-10
Across
- a measure of the relative contribution, an individual trait to the next generation
- structures Are structures that are reduced forms of functional structures in other organisms.
- structures Anatomically similar structures inherited from a common ancestor are called homologous structure.
- some species have evolved morphological adaptations that allows them to blend in with their environments
- an early pre-birth stage of an organism's development
Down
- remains of an organism or its activities
- traits More early features including teeth and tails that do not appear in ancestral forms.
- trait Newly evolved features like feathers that do not appear in the fossils of common ancestors.
- structures Can be used for the same purpose and can be superficially similar in construction, but are not inherited from a common ancestor.
- scientists have confirmed and expanded Darwin's study of distribution of plants and animals around the world in a field of study now
- one species evolves to resemble another species
11 Clues: remains of an organism or its activities • one species evolves to resemble another species • an early pre-birth stage of an organism's development • a measure of the relative contribution, an individual trait to the next generation • traits More early features including teeth and tails that do not appear in ancestral forms. • ...
Intro to Theorists Vocab 2022-08-20
Across
- coherent set of logically related concepts that seek to organize, explain, and predict data
- Piaget’s term for changes in cognitive structure to include new information
- unfolding of a universal natural sequence of physical and behavioral changes
- totality of non-heredity influences on development (nurture)
- Kohlberg’s theory (2nd step) which standardizes how authority figures are internalized
- pattern of change in emotions, personality, and social relationships
- research method in which behavior is studies in a natural setting without intervention or manipulation
- the nature of reality based on societally shared perceptions or assumptions
Down
- research method in which all participants are observed under the same controlled conditions
- learning based on association of behavior with it’s consequences
- Bandura’s expansion of social learning theory holds that children learn gender roles through socialization
- Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory that proposes children construct autobiographical memories through conversation with adults about shared events
- growth of body and brain, including biological and physiological patterns of change in sensory capacities, motor skills and health
- Vygotsky’s term for the difference between what a child can do alone and what they can do with help
- inborn characteristics received from the biological parents (nature)
- Piaget’s term for awareness of two objects that are equal according to a certain measure
- pattern of change in mental abilities (learning, memory, reasoning)
- Piaget’s term for incorporation of new information into an existing cognitive structure
- learning based on the association of a stimulus that does not ordinarily elicit a particular response with another stimulus that does elicit a response
- Bronfenbrenner’s approach to understanding processes and contexts of child development that identifies five levels of environmental influence
20 Clues: totality of non-heredity influences on development (nurture) • learning based on association of behavior with it’s consequences • pattern of change in mental abilities (learning, memory, reasoning) • inborn characteristics received from the biological parents (nature) • pattern of change in emotions, personality, and social relationships • ...
Molecular Theory 2022-09-01
Across
- firm and stable in shape; not liquid or fluid
- below 32°F (0°C).
- water which collects as droplets on a cold surface when humid air is in contact with it.
- the colorless fluid part of blood, lymph, or milk, in which corpuscles or fat globules are suspended.
- When a liquid changes form into a gas
- The temperature at which a material changes from a gas to a liquid
- the temperature at which a liquid solidifies
Down
- a substance that flows freely but is of constant volume, having a consistency like that of water or oil.
- the temperature at which a given solid will melt.
- the temperature at which a liquid boils and turns to vapor
- a substance or matter in a state in which it will expand freely to fill the whole of a container, having no fixed shape (unlike a solid) and no fixed volume (unlike a liquid).
- becoming liquefied by heat.
- physical substance in general, as distinct from mind and spirit; (in physics) that which occupies space and possesses rest mass, especially as distinct from energy.
- the degree or intensity of heat present in a substance or object, especially as expressed according to a comparative scale and shown by a thermometer or perceived by touch.
- Molecular Theory explains the states of matter, and is based on the idea that matter is composed of tiny particles that are always in motion.
15 Clues: below 32°F (0°C). • becoming liquefied by heat. • When a liquid changes form into a gas • the temperature at which a liquid solidifies • firm and stable in shape; not liquid or fluid • the temperature at which a given solid will melt. • the temperature at which a liquid boils and turns to vapor • The temperature at which a material changes from a gas to a liquid • ...
Unit 3 Review Sport Psychology 2025-05-20
Across
- In order to overcome focusing on problems, we must _____ out
- part of the self determination theory
- When individuals overly narrow their focus they will fall into this trap.
- Clutch it not a trait but a _____
- R.A. Dickey mastered this type of pitch
- Name of the mascot in the football movie that we just watched
- type of effect that happens with small wins
- One of the four characteristics of longevity
- There is a social theory that says were perform better in secure environments
Down
- Our expectations shape our _____ stage
- the ability to do something successfully or efficiently (part of self determination theory)
- People that are ____ struggle with emotional control.
- a paradox where clarity and purpose become your focus.
- type of effect that happens when there are others watching
- your goals and practices should be 33% of the time great, good/okay, and bad. It is called the rule of _____
- The non reactive mind says that we must _____
16 Clues: Clutch it not a trait but a _____ • part of the self determination theory • Our expectations shape our _____ stage • R.A. Dickey mastered this type of pitch • type of effect that happens with small wins • One of the four characteristics of longevity • The non reactive mind says that we must _____ • People that are ____ struggle with emotional control. • ...
locke 2022-09-14
Across
- exercised considerable influence in academic educational
- Established the normative theory
- Founder of child psychoanalysis
- Founder of kindergarten
- Social developmentalist coined the term
- Inventor of the first usable intelligence test
- Children develop at their own pace
Down
- Children’s moral development
- Developed Reggio Emilia Schools
- Saw the importance of home education
- Founder of educational philosophy
- Believed that children are born naturally good
- Considered the father of psychology
- Children's intellectual development
- Stressed the importance of children cultural
- Studied Freudian theory from Anna
16 Clues: Founder of kindergarten • Children’s moral development • Developed Reggio Emilia Schools • Founder of child psychoanalysis • Established the normative theory • Founder of educational philosophy • Studied Freudian theory from Anna • Children develop at their own pace • Considered the father of psychology • Children's intellectual development • ...
Mid-Term Exam 2012-10-07
Across
- A qualitative measurement technique where data are coded and then provided to the research participants for feedback.
- Type of coding in qualitative research that condenses data into broad themes
- In qualitative research, this is the elements that are physically present and countable
- Type of reliability that measures agreement between two raters
- Gender, religion, and marital status are examples of this type of variable
- How much an ethnographer reveals about him/herself
- Type of research that constructs social reality and cultural meaning and theory and data are fused
- As we collect data, we develop and revise the theory based on what the data tell us
Down
- Type of reliability that examines if several items measure the same construct
- When an ethnographer starts sampling events, times and places that will collect data to support his/her grounded theory
- Type of variable that contains a large number of values or attributes that flow along a continuum
- Type of research that measures objective facts and separates theory and data
- Level of measurement that includes different categories only
- In ethnography, the particular location or setting where “members” live
- In ethnography, people with formal or informal authority to control access to a site
- Level of measurement that includes different categories, ranking, and allows distance between categories to be measured
16 Clues: How much an ethnographer reveals about him/herself • Level of measurement that includes different categories only • Type of reliability that measures agreement between two raters • In ethnography, the particular location or setting where “members” live • Gender, religion, and marital status are examples of this type of variable • ...
r-controlled Spelling Words 2021-10-07
Across
- riding the waves
- firm
- these make up complete sentences
- come back
- a test
- this is done in school
- sneak around
- call out
- desires
- has a collar
- to do a job
Down
- a line of a song
- on a cowboys boot
- get out of the way of another car
- water spouts
- a sensory part of the body
- to be parched
- jump forward
- shake and move around
- the toothpaste does this when you press the tube
20 Clues: firm • a test • desires • call out • come back • to do a job • water spouts • sneak around • jump forward • has a collar • to be parched • a line of a song • riding the waves • on a cowboys boot • shake and move around • this is done in school • a sensory part of the body • these make up complete sentences • get out of the way of another car • the toothpaste does this when you press the tube
Black Holes 2014-02-06
Across
- "As we observe an object approach a source of gravity, we observe its rate of pass of time to"
- The minimum stable orbital distance from a 4 solar mass black hole (2 words)
- "As the velocity of an object approaches the speed of light, its mass appears to"
- These distort the shapes of objects as they approach a black hole (2 words)
- The only thing in the Universe which is not relative (3 words)
- The principle that demonstrates that the effects of gravity and accelerated motion are identical
- This law protects us from the unpredictable properties of singularities (2 words)
- A place surrounding a rotating black hole where it is impossible to be still
- The type of redshift observed when a photon escapes from a massive object
- horizon "The ""surface"" of a black hole"
- The type of star at the location of Cygnus X-1
- The theory of relativity which is NOT a theory of gravity
- If we could observe an object traveling at the speed of light we would measure its length along the direction of motion to be
- The number of dimensions in Einstein's General Theory of Relativity
- Where do the X-rays originate from in Cygnus X-1? (2 words)
Down
- "At the end of fusion, the core of a very high mass star is too massive to form one of these (2 words)"
- The I in LIGO
- If you look at the light from stars close to the event horizon of a black hole you will see this (2 words)
- Light follows this property of spacetime around a massive object
- The charge on a black hole which attracts an electron
- Ripples in spacetime
- A tunnel through hyperspace between two distant parts of the Universe
- Objects with high escape velocities have high
- The radius of a 5 solar mass black hole in kilometers
- Newton's theory of gravity cannot explain the existence of black holes because light has no
- The star at the location of Cygnus X-1 emits which kind of radiation most strongly?
- At the center of a black hole
27 Clues: The I in LIGO • Ripples in spacetime • At the center of a black hole • horizon "The ""surface"" of a black hole" • Objects with high escape velocities have high • The type of star at the location of Cygnus X-1 • The charge on a black hole which attracts an electron • The radius of a 5 solar mass black hole in kilometers • ...
acts3:3-6 2023-03-02
Across
- notice aken of someone or something
- a feeling of surprise mingled with admiration
- moving at a regular pace by moving you legs
- one of the 12 disciples, was fisherman
- a surprising and welcoming event that is not explicable
- firm belief in the reliability
Down
- a surprising and previously unknown fact
- freely transferring the possession of something
- regard (something) as likely to happen
- firm conviction that something is the case
10 Clues: firm belief in the reliability • notice aken of someone or something • regard (something) as likely to happen • one of the 12 disciples, was fisherman • a surprising and previously unknown fact • firm conviction that something is the case • moving at a regular pace by moving you legs • a feeling of surprise mingled with admiration • ...
Scientific Revolution Crossword 2020-11-05
Across
- made 4 laws
- the father of chemistry
- Developed a vaccine for smallpox in 1796
- very, very different; also something surfers say
- a satellite of a planet
- the mysterious force that will one day destroy our solar system
- published a study of human anatomy
- The series of events that led to the birth of modern science is called the?
- known for his extensive and detailed notes
- discovered that planets orbits are elliptical
- new invention of period that allows seeing the formerly unseen
- discovered that planets orbits are elliptical
- said the Earth revolved around the sun
Down
- to look at something thoughtfully
- what you do to test a theory
- 3 dimensional representation of the earth
- Ancient Greek thinker, astronomer, mapmaker who said the sun orbited the earth
- an advanced form of mathematics
- Discoveries in this led to new conceptions of the universe
- a way of looking at the world through logic and reason
- proves heliocentric theory is correct with telescope; unpopular with Catholic church
- a reason for phenomena based on facts
- literally translated from the Latin, means "earth" "write"
- Newton's third law, the law of reciprocal action states, "To every action, there is an equal and opposite ____."
- isaac found this
- Galileo found himself under suspicion by this group
- volume, temperature, and pressure of a gas are related
- what every planet in our solar system does
28 Clues: made 4 laws • isaac found this • the father of chemistry • a satellite of a planet • what you do to test a theory • an advanced form of mathematics • to look at something thoughtfully • published a study of human anatomy • a reason for phenomena based on facts • said the Earth revolved around the sun • Developed a vaccine for smallpox in 1796 • ...
Lesson2Chapter8 Econ 2025-04-02
Across
- places where entrepreneurs can receive the training and other assistance to build a successful start-up business
- firm with four or more businesses making unrelated products, with no single business responsible for a majority of its sales
- industries that prefer to have their factories closer to the market for the finished product because it is difficult or more expensive to transport than their raw materials
- report showing a business's sales, expenses, and profits for a certain period, usually three months or a year
- total amount of new funds the business generates from operations; broadest measure of profits for a firm because it includes both net income and noncash charges
- a business’s proximity to its consumers or to the source of its inventories or necessary raw materials
- combination of two or more business enterprises to form a single firm
- provider of investment funds to a start-up business in exchange for partial ownership of the business
- measure of business profits determined by subtracting all expenses, including taxes, from revenues
- combination of firms producing the same kind of product
- combination of firms involved in different steps of manufacturing, marketing, or sales
Down
- industries that prefer to be situated close to their raw materials in order to “lose” unnecessary material because the finished product is lighter, easier, or cheaper to transport
- the distance people are willing to travel to visit a location where the product is sold
- informal and usually affluent investors who provide funds to less-promising start-ups
- corporation producing and selling without regard to national boundaries and whose business activities are located in several different countries
- minimum stimulus needed to produce a nerve impulse.
- using social networking to appeal to potential investors
17 Clues: minimum stimulus needed to produce a nerve impulse. • combination of firms producing the same kind of product • using social networking to appeal to potential investors • combination of two or more business enterprises to form a single firm • informal and usually affluent investors who provide funds to less-promising start-ups • ...
Attorney Specialization and Practice Settings 2023-09-11
Across
- big-name lawyers bringing in big-money clients
- attorney who works mainly with lawsuits with the goal of taking cases to court and winning
- associates receive a fixed salary with increases and bonuses based on the length of service
- attorneys who are salaried government employees but are responsible for indigent defense
- supervises and conducts litigation on behalf of the United States in the U.S. Supreme Court
- very small single-speciality practices
- public interest law work done voluntarily by attorneys either free or for a reduced fee
- attorneys who represent the government and try cases on behalf of the government
- acquire limited voting rights but are compensated with a fixed salary
- attorneys who are employed by the firm with the prospect of becoming partners at some future point
- some associates advance to become equity partners while others become non-equity partners
- chief legal officer of a political unit
Down
- a request to a court to obtain an order or ruling directing that some act be done in favor of the applicant
- associates who demonstrate themselves to be skilled attorneys capable of generating sustained revenue over a period of years become partners and share profits
- never see the inside of a courtroom; spends the majority of time researching, drafting, negotiating, and advising
- relies on the prosecution of a crime identified by the police as well as taking actions intended to address problems before they result in crime
- legal body consisting of citizens with the authority to conduct official investigations into possible criminal conduct
- works on state or federal prosecution cases or defends a client accused of a crime
- law work concerning the legal and financial interests of individuals and families
- attorneygeneral created by the Judiciary Act on September 24, 1789
- acquire ownership stakes in the firm and share profits
- may specialize in one specific area or work in many areas, including personal injury, landlord-tenant, or contract breaches
- attorneys who jointly own the firm and direct its legal operations
- attorney who has their own private law practice or work in partnership with one or two other attorneys
24 Clues: very small single-speciality practices • chief legal officer of a political unit • big-name lawyers bringing in big-money clients • acquire ownership stakes in the firm and share profits • attorneygeneral created by the Judiciary Act on September 24, 1789 • attorneys who jointly own the firm and direct its legal operations • ...
Introduction to the Philosophy of the Human Person Quiz #4D: Truth 2023-10-08
Across
- Truth that are based on scientific facts
- We acquire knowledge through our sight, hearing, taste, touch, and smell
- A branch of philosophy devoted to the discovery of proper methods of acquiring and validating knowledge
- This theory of truth looks at the way things are with reality
- This theory of truth looks at the more complex systems within the reality
- This theory of truth looks at the usefulness of a belief
- A statement that expresses either an assertion or denial that an existent belongs to a class or possess certain attributes
Down
- The process of retracing the steps of acquiring knowledge
- A reasoning process where an argument is expressed
- an abstract or generic idea generalized from particular instances
- Philosophers refer to it as the rational faculty
- Truth is analogous with sincerity
- Perceptual knowledge
- What is around us and what is in our heads
- Truth that are based on agreements of people
15 Clues: Perceptual knowledge • Truth is analogous with sincerity • Truth that are based on scientific facts • What is around us and what is in our heads • Truth that are based on agreements of people • Philosophers refer to it as the rational faculty • A reasoning process where an argument is expressed • This theory of truth looks at the usefulness of a belief • ...
Sam and Natalee's Evolution Crossword 2021-10-12
Across
- theory that characteristics can be directly inherited
- the slow changes a species experiences over time
- the difference of individuals in same species
- an organism's ability to survive and reproduce in it’s given environment
- theory that states how over millions of years, organisms evolved
- theory that evolution happens steadily and slowly
- the last common ancestor between shared organisms
Down
- change in genetic material in the cell
- the impression of an organism from the past
- a trait or strength helps an organism survive
- preserved in sedimentary rocks, newer fossils are found on closer layers, while older fossils are found in the lower layers
- part of DNA that codes specific traits
- when all organisms of a species are dead
- process where better adapted individuals are more likely to survive and reproduce
- a group of similar organisms that can reproduce together
15 Clues: change in genetic material in the cell • part of DNA that codes specific traits • when all organisms of a species are dead • the impression of an organism from the past • the difference of individuals in same species • a trait or strength helps an organism survive • the slow changes a species experiences over time • theory that evolution happens steadily and slowly • ...
The Framework 2025-07-05
Across
- For Aristotle, this is the chief good of human beings
- The moral theory that emphasizes consequences
- Kant’s moral law: act only on maxims that can be a ______ law
- A person who consistently acts virtuously is said to have good ______
- Ethics that emphasizes human flourishing or excellence
- According to Kant, the only thing good without qualification
- Another proponent of utilitarianism before Mill
- The foundation of Kant’s ethics is ______ reason
Down
- The Greek philosopher who emphasized character and virtue
- Rawls’ concept of justice emphasizes fairness and equal liberty
- This philosopher emphasized the “greatest happiness principle”
- St. Thomas Aquinas’ ethics is based on this type of law
- This ethical theory is focused on duty
- The theory of morality concerned with what is good as an end
- For Rawls, inequalities must benefit everyone and be open to all
15 Clues: This ethical theory is focused on duty • The moral theory that emphasizes consequences • Another proponent of utilitarianism before Mill • The foundation of Kant’s ethics is ______ reason • For Aristotle, this is the chief good of human beings • Ethics that emphasizes human flourishing or excellence • St. Thomas Aquinas’ ethics is based on this type of law • ...
Nurseword Puzzle 2023-11-21
Across
- A term used to the state of going back to the actual state of health
- These are events that produce stress
- In the context of Sr. Callista Roy’s Adaptation Model, this is a type of stimuli that strengthens the effect of the focal stimulus
- This refers to the differences or variations that can be found both between and among cultures
- Transaction will occur if the role expectations and role performance are in _________
- _________ system model of Dorothy Johnson states that the client is a collection of behavioral subsystem
- Joyce Travelbee stated that the existence of this, whether physical, mental, or spiritual is the proper concern of the nurse.
- It is the vehicle for delineating nursing (patient) problems as the patient moves towards a healthy outcome
- Occurs between the person and the most significant other in which love, respect, and value is given and taken
- The process where a person reaches the highest level of consciousness
Down
- In the context of Peplau’s Theory of Interpersonal Relations, the phase in which the person makes use of the nurse’s is called __________
- According to Betty Neuman, a person is a/an _____________
- A nursing theorist that has the title “Lady with the Lamp”
- When all parts of a person work harmoniously, he or she is in the state of __________
- A concept of Patricia Benner that focuses in helping the teacher understand how to assist the learner in advancing to the next level
- In Jean Orlando’s theory, this involves the interaction of the behavior of the patient, the reaction of the nurse, and the nursing action that benefits the patient
- This encompasses the mutual and continuous relationship of the human energy field and the environment energy field
- In Virginia Henderson’s Theory, it is the level of nurse-patient relationship by which the nurse performs tasks for the patient
- The nurse’s role in this circle takes on a negative quality like avoidance of pain rather than positive quality like comforting
- From the eight axioms in the Theory of Caritative Caring by Katie Eriksonn, it is described as the basis for all humanity.
20 Clues: These are events that produce stress • According to Betty Neuman, a person is a/an _____________ • A nursing theorist that has the title “Lady with the Lamp” • A term used to the state of going back to the actual state of health • The process where a person reaches the highest level of consciousness • ...
Earth science 2015-04-22
Across
- world's main continuous expanses of land
- point on the earth's surface above the focus
- many fractured pieces of crust along a large fault
- movement of the continents across the earth
- underground cavity that contains magma
- physical force against an object
- underwater through
- change of pressure in a narrow region
Down
- a curved line of volcanoes that forms parallel to a plate boundary
- elastic wave in the earth produced by an earthquake
- in the interior of the earth where the earthquake originates
- molten rock
- scientific theory that describes the large-scale motion of earth's lithosphere
- changing physical location
- forms where tectonic plates slide horizontally
- originator of the theory of continental drift
- all continents were connected
- movement of the earth's crust caused by the release of stress
- mixture of fragments from the volcano
- rupture on the crust
20 Clues: molten rock • underwater through • rupture on the crust • changing physical location • all continents were connected • physical force against an object • mixture of fragments from the volcano • change of pressure in a narrow region • underground cavity that contains magma • world's main continuous expanses of land • movement of the continents across the earth • ...
history of an atom 2024-09-06
Across
- when two elements combine to form more than one compound, the weights of one element that combine with a fixed weight of the other are in a ratio of small whole numbers
- the atom consists of a nucleus surrounded by orbiting electrons
- introduced the atomic theory into chemistry and known for his work on human optics
- one of the greatest philosophers who ever lived and the first genuine scientist in history
- best known for his pioneering studies of radioactivity and the atom
- all matter is composed of atoms
- a central figure in the development of the atomic theory of the universe
Down
- a theory of the nature of matter
- based on the combination of four different roots that give rise to life and matter
- the electrons encircle the nucleus of the atom in specific allowable paths called orbits
- known for adapting Rutherford's nuclear structure to Max Planck's quantum theory and created the Bohr model
- discovered the electron and then went on to propose a model for the structure of the atom
- all samples of a given chemical compound have the same elemental composition by mass
- represents atoms containing a nucleus of protons and neutrons and a vague gradient or cloud surrounding it containing the electrons
- the atom is a sphere of positive charge and negatively charged electrons are embedded in it to balance the total positive charge
15 Clues: all matter is composed of atoms • a theory of the nature of matter • the atom consists of a nucleus surrounded by orbiting electrons • best known for his pioneering studies of radioactivity and the atom • a central figure in the development of the atomic theory of the universe • based on the combination of four different roots that give rise to life and matter • ...
DNA CROSS WORD PUZZLE 2021-12-12
Across
- - He proposed the geocentric theory.
- - He proposed the heliocentric theory.
- - A scientist who studies objects in space, such as black holes, galaxies, moons, planets, stars, etc.
- - A proof of Big Bang theory that shows a change in frequency of waves of moving objects relative to its source.
- - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe.
- - A theory that says the universe began as a small point that expanded rapidly about 13.8 billion years ago.
- - Also called as space junk.
- - Are rocky objects revolving around the sun that are too small to be called planets.
Down
- - A model showing the Sun as a fixed point in the center of the universe with objects revolving around it.
- - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole.
- - Different beliefs about the universe just like a cosmic egg, a flat island divided by river, and a powerful being created everything.
- - A galaxy of no visible pattern.
- - The Sun together with the group of planets and other celestial bodies that revolve around it that are held by its gravitational attraction.
- - The path one object takes as it revolves around another object in space.
- - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun.
15 Clues: - Also called as space junk. • - A galaxy of no visible pattern. • - He proposed the geocentric theory. • - He proposed the heliocentric theory. • - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun. • - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe. • - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole. • ...
Famous Scientists 2024-10-01
Across
- Developed pasteurization and contributed to germ theory.
- Founder of modern genetics through his study of pea plants.
- Considered the first computer programmer.
- Famous for his work on black holes and author of 'A Brief History of Time'.
- Astronomer who supported the heliocentric theory.
Down
- Developed the theory of relativity.
- Pioneered research on radioactivity and won two Nobel Prizes.
- Formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection.
- Inventor known for his work with electricity and the AC current.
- Physicist known for the laws of motion and gravity.
10 Clues: Developed the theory of relativity. • Considered the first computer programmer. • Astronomer who supported the heliocentric theory. • Physicist known for the laws of motion and gravity. • Developed pasteurization and contributed to germ theory. • Formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection. • Founder of modern genetics through his study of pea plants. • ...
Scientific Revolution 2023-11-09
Across
- Newtons law "for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction"
- Scientist who discovered the laws of motion and gravity
- city in which Vatican city is located in(pope residence)
- look for patters in experiments, sometimes called bottom up
- scholars began to question old teachings and ideas
- leader of the catholic church
- Studied the stars for over 25 years
- Sun centered theory
Down
- book published by Galileo
- Newtons law "force of an object is equal to mass times acceleration"
- new invention used to study the night sky
- test theory with experiments, sometimes called going top down
- earth centered theory
- Belief that God created the universe and then allowed it to run on natural laws
- Newtons law "body at rest will remain at rest"
- Religous group that protested Galileo
- Used telescope to observe and study the stars
17 Clues: Sun centered theory • earth centered theory • book published by Galileo • leader of the catholic church • Studied the stars for over 25 years • Religous group that protested Galileo • new invention used to study the night sky • Used telescope to observe and study the stars • Newtons law "body at rest will remain at rest" • scholars began to question old teachings and ideas • ...
GROUP 6 ASSESSMENT - FOR TOPICS 1, 2, AND 4 2023-07-20
Across
- He is one of the founders of Humanistic Psychology.
- A person's actual and ideal self are consistent/congruent to one another.
- It is a form of self talk that guides the learner’s thinking and action.
- What will you do after you identify the problem?
- In Sociocultural theory, how many factors affecting the development of cognition.
- It guides a tradition of quality early learning.
- The self that we would like to be in the future.
- This is the ability to use one's knowledge effectively.
- This term refers to a competent adult or more advance peer.
- An explanation about something in natural world.
Down
- It is the notion of the self or self-concept.
- It is an act of noticing something carefully in order to gain information.
- It is where creative thinking and risk-taking are features of a person's life.
- It incorporates new research knowledge and science.
- It is the support or assistance that let the learners accomplished a certain task.
- What will you do after you decide what to change?
- What is the letter P stands for the term ZPD in the sociocultural theory?
- This is use to construct decisions about how to handle inappropriate behaviors.
18 Clues: It is the notion of the self or self-concept. • What will you do after you identify the problem? • It guides a tradition of quality early learning. • The self that we would like to be in the future. • An explanation about something in natural world. • What will you do after you decide what to change? • He is one of the founders of Humanistic Psychology. • ...
Evolution Unit 1 2024-02-27
10 Clues: CHANGE • SPICIES DEAD • name of book • name of his ship • THEORY=EARTH IS OLD • where Darwin studied • MAN CHOOSES BREEDING • THEORY=NATURAL SELECTION • SELECTION SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST • THEORY=HUMANS WILL OUTGROW THE EARTH
Joshua's crossword 2018-09-25
6 Clues: everyone is ______ in a way • conductive to success ;favourable • savagely fierce, cruel, or violent • to make it cheaper you _________ with someone • there are so many ________ on this square based pyramid • form a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence
Scientific Revolution 2015-12-19
Across
- Time during the scientific revolution
- The planet that was thought to be the center of all planets in the geocentric theory
- The founder of the Heliocentric theory
- A major change in the European thought, of which the study of the natural world began to be characterized by careful observation and questioning
- A logical procedure for the gathering int ideas in science
Down
- Founder of modern chemistry and pioneered the use of the scientific method in chemistry
- Theory that all planets revolved around the sun
- An Italian scientist that made theories about astronomy and stood infront of the church and said that the ideas of Copernicus were false
- English scientist that helped to make a single theory of motion
- Theory that all planets revolved around earth
10 Clues: Time during the scientific revolution • The founder of the Heliocentric theory • Theory that all planets revolved around earth • Theory that all planets revolved around the sun • A logical procedure for the gathering int ideas in science • English scientist that helped to make a single theory of motion • ...
Pretest 2014-06-10
Across
- constituencies with a stake in the fortunes of the company are known as stakeholders.
- management concerned with the acquisition, financing, and management of assets with some overall goal in mind.
- Treasurer most likely report to Chief Financial Officer.
Down
- responsibility a concept that implies that the firm should consider issues such as protecting the consumer, paying fair wages, maintaining fair hiring practices, supporting education, and considering environmental issues.
- maximization concerned with the maximization of a firm's earnings after taxes.
- theory concerned with the branch of economics relating the behavior of principals and their agents.
6 Clues: Treasurer most likely report to Chief Financial Officer. • maximization concerned with the maximization of a firm's earnings after taxes. • constituencies with a stake in the fortunes of the company are known as stakeholders. • theory concerned with the branch of economics relating the behavior of principals and their agents. • ...
famous scientists 2023-12-10
Across
- Theoretical physicist, made complex concepts of the universe accessible.
- Pioneer in marine exploration, introducing the world to ocean wonders.
- Contributed to atomic theory, deepening our understanding of matter.
- Father of genetics, laying the groundwork for the study of heredity.
- Inventor and engineer, known for contributions to electrical systems.
- Developed the theory of evolution, explaining the diversity of life.
- Contributed to germ theory, improving public health. Euler Made significant contributions to mathematics, shaping the field.
Down
- Father of modern physics, studying the stars and planets.
- Brothers First to achieve powered flight, changing the way we travel.
- Explored the universe, expanding our understanding of galaxies.
- Formulated the laws of motion, explaining how objects move.
- Invented the telephone, connecting people across distances.
- Discovered radioactivity, paving the way for medical advancements.
- Inventor of the light bulb, bringing light to our homes.
14 Clues: Inventor of the light bulb, bringing light to our homes. • Father of modern physics, studying the stars and planets. • Formulated the laws of motion, explaining how objects move. • Invented the telephone, connecting people across distances. • Explored the universe, expanding our understanding of galaxies. • ...
Joshua's crossword 2018-09-25
6 Clues: everyone is ______ in a way • conductive to success ;favourable • savagely fierce, cruel, or violent • to make it cheaper you _________ with someone • there are so many ________ on this square based pyramid • form a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence
THEORY OF EVOLUTION VOCAB 2017-02-26
Across
- allows an organism to survive and reproduce in its environment
- a process where individuals that are better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce than othersthat are not
- the variety of organisms that inhabit the Earth
- the preserved remains or traces of an organism that lived in the past
- the disappearance of all members of a species from Earth
- The 1ST word of a two word process where scientists look at the half-life of chemicals contained in rocks around a fossil to determine the Age of the fossil
- evolutionary process by which reproductively isolated biological populations evolve to become distinct species
- a species on earth that is surviving and thriving
- gaps in the fossil record that provide proof of evolution
- any change in the DNA of an organism.
Down
- naturalist who formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection
- any difference between organisms of the same species
- similar structures that related species have inherited from a common ancestor (example – bones in bird’s wing, dolphin fin, and dog leg are very similar)
- the gradual change in species over time
- Vessel that carried the naturalist that studied organisms in the galapagos
- had diverse traits they exhibited on each of the different islands. Each species was best adapted to the food, climate, etc. of the island on which they lived.
16 Clues: any change in the DNA of an organism. • the gradual change in species over time • the variety of organisms that inhabit the Earth • a species on earth that is surviving and thriving • any difference between organisms of the same species • the disappearance of all members of a species from Earth • gaps in the fossil record that provide proof of evolution • ...
Freud's theory of dreaming 2025-03-05
Across
- Freud said when you release repressed thoughts it reduces which negative feeling?
- When many ideas appear in one dream
- Often unimportant things are actually important
- What do we do with urges that are inappropriate?
- Conscious part of the Psych
- Type of elaboration where the mind adds bits so dreams make sense
- What part of the mind can only be accessed through dreams?
- What did Freud say our dreams contain?
- Dreamwork reveals the ________wishes and desires of dreamer
Down
- Hidden meaning of the dream
- Freud says dreams __________ people from their own unconscious desires
- What is the name of the therapist who interprets dreams?
- Moral part of the Psych
- The story/content the dream teller tells about the dream
- Freud analogy did Freud compare the mind too?
- Part of the Psych deep in the unconscious
16 Clues: Moral part of the Psych • Hidden meaning of the dream • Conscious part of the Psych • When many ideas appear in one dream • What did Freud say our dreams contain? • Part of the Psych deep in the unconscious • Freud analogy did Freud compare the mind too? • Often unimportant things are actually important • What do we do with urges that are inappropriate? • ...
Introduction to Group Dynamics 2019-06-06
Across
- there should be a sense of holistic or unified whole
- subjective state of positive or negative affect often accompanied by a degree of arousal or activation
- methodology that looks into causal relationships of variables
- the underlying patterns of roles, norms and relations among members that organizes groups
- proposed the Social Exchange Theory
- to become part of this, a person must establish a link with a person who is already in the circle
- explains that one's actions in a group are because of rewards and punishments
- proposed the Self-categorization Theory
Down
- group of whales
- means that members depend on one another
- methodology that looks into connections and relationships of variables
- groups that are consists of two people
- theory that explains the "survival of the fittest" mindset of going into groups
- type of group that acts like your core group
- pack of baboons
15 Clues: group of whales • pack of baboons • proposed the Social Exchange Theory • groups that are consists of two people • proposed the Self-categorization Theory • means that members depend on one another • type of group that acts like your core group • there should be a sense of holistic or unified whole • methodology that looks into causal relationships of variables • ...
Educational Leaders 2023-03-02
11 Clues: socratic method • learning by doing • taxonomy of education • social learning theory • psycho-social development • made blackboards in the US • multiple intelligence theory • zone of proximal development • theory of cognitive development • operate and classical conditioning • educated teachers to teach kindergarten
Ch. 16 General Relativity 2016-03-20
Across
- An object approaching the speed of light will see its momentum increase dramatically due to (two words)
- Scientists can see the effects of relativistic momentum on subatomic particles by viewing the ________ of their trajectories.
- Theory of relativity in which gravity cause space to curve and time to slow down.
- c can be thought of as the universal (two words)
- Energy of being (two words)
- If a chemical reaction gives off energy, it underwent a __________ in mass.
- These reactions have a much greater decrease in rest mass than chemical reactions.
- Gravitational red shift was confirmed in 1960 at this school when high-frequency gamma rays were sent up and down in a laboratory building.
- An object pushed to the speed of light would have infinite momentum and, therefore, require an infinite
- Being unable to know if you are being accelerated or under the influence of gravity is known as the principle of ________.
Down
- Gravitational waves are ______ that travel outward from a gravitational source at the speed of light.
- New and old theory must overlap and agree in a region where the results of the old theory have been fully verified (two words).
- Represented by the letter "p"
- According to Einstein, tossed balls and light curve because the space-time in which they travel is _________.
- Einstein's theory of general relativity accounted for the extra _____ seconds of arc per century in Mercury's precession.
- A constant property of an object, no matter what speed it has (two words)
- A phenomenon known as gravitational ______ occurs when light from a distant galaxy is bent as it passes a nearby galaxy, causing multiple images of the distant galaxy to appear.
- According to Einstein's famous equation E=mc^2, mass and energy are
18 Clues: Energy of being (two words) • Represented by the letter "p" • c can be thought of as the universal (two words) • According to Einstein's famous equation E=mc^2, mass and energy are • A constant property of an object, no matter what speed it has (two words) • If a chemical reaction gives off energy, it underwent a __________ in mass. • ...
Developmental Theories 2021-10-04
Across
- thoughts you are aware of
- Number of stages in Erikson's theory
- reaching your fullest potential
- decision making part of personality (Freud)
- developed the hierarchy of needs theory
- follower of Freud's teachings
Down
- Treatment to bring memories into the conscious
- conscience. Wrong vs. Right (Freud)
- First set of needs that must be met (maslow)
- An organized set of ideas to explain something
- Urges/needs according to Freud
- IF a task is not worked out it will have a _____ effect on personality development
- Maslows needs move in what direction?
13 Clues: thoughts you are aware of • follower of Freud's teachings • Urges/needs according to Freud • reaching your fullest potential • conscience. Wrong vs. Right (Freud) • Number of stages in Erikson's theory • Maslows needs move in what direction? • developed the hierarchy of needs theory • decision making part of personality (Freud) • First set of needs that must be met (maslow) • ...
Daniel Levinson's Theory of the Seasons of Life 2013-03-03
Across
- "get ___"
- Early Adult Transition starts
- Leave _______ life
- Forming an _________
- Complete _______ and start work
- Early adulthood in years
- End old ________
- Form _____ relationships
- Individual's sense of ___
Down
- Entering the Adult World starts
- Individuals _-________ their lives
- Age 30 Transition starts
- Age 30 transition ends
- Form a dream and give it a ____ in life
- Ends in the early ______
- The _____ is the core of the life structure
- Build the ________ of one's life
17 Clues: "get ___" • End old ________ • Leave _______ life • Forming an _________ • Age 30 transition ends • Age 30 Transition starts • Early adulthood in years • Ends in the early ______ • Form _____ relationships • Individual's sense of ___ • Early Adult Transition starts • Entering the Adult World starts • Complete _______ and start work • Build the ________ of one's life • ...
What Is Psychology? (Key Terms) 2013-10-14
Across
- The shift of an emotion from its original focus to another object, person, or situation
- association A method used in psychoanalysis where a patient relaxes and says whatever comes to mind
- psychology A branch of psychology founded by Carl Jung, based on the idea that balancing a person's psyche would allow the person to reach his or her full potential
- Universal symbols that tend to reappear over time; includes models of people, behaviours, and personalities
- theory An approach to therapy that focuses on resolving a patient's conflicted conscious and unconscious feelings psychoanalytic theory
- memories, instincts, and experiences common to all
- Psychologists who modified Freud's psychoanalytic theory to include social and cultural aspects
- Information that we are always aware of; our conscious mind performs the thinking when we take in new information
- Freud's term for the instinctual part of the mind, which operates on the pleasure principle
- Freud's term for the moral centre of the mind
Down
- disorder A mental disorder involving anxiety and fear
- influence the unconscious mind throughout life
- The ego's way of distorting reality to deal with anxiety
- Freud's term for the rational part of the mind, which operates on the reality principle
- A process in which unacceptable desires or impulses are excluded from consciousness and left to operate in the unconscious
- An individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting
- A defense mechanism whereby a person refuses to recognize or acknowledge something that is painful
- Information processing in our mind that we are not aware of; according to Freud, it holds our unacceptable thoughts, feelings, and memories; according to Jung, it includes patterns
- unconscious The shared, inherited pool of memories from our ancestors
- A defense mechanism whereby a person attributes their own threatening impulses onto someone else
- Freud's theory That all human behaviour is influenced by early childhood and that childhood
21 Clues: Freud's term for the moral centre of the mind • influence the unconscious mind throughout life • memories, instincts, and experiences common to all • disorder A mental disorder involving anxiety and fear • The ego's way of distorting reality to deal with anxiety • unconscious The shared, inherited pool of memories from our ancestors • ...
What Is Psychology? (Key Terms) 2013-10-14
Across
- A process in which unacceptable desires or impulses are excluded from consciousness and left to operate in the unconscious
- An individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting
- psychology A branch of psychology founded by Carl Jung, based on the idea that balancing a person's psyche would allow the person to reach his or her full potential
- The ego's way of distorting reality to deal with anxiety
- Freud's term for the rational part of the mind, which operates on the reality principle
- Freud's term for the instinctual part of the mind, which operates on the pleasure principle
- memories, instincts, and experiences common to all
- A defense mechanism whereby a person attributes their own threatening impulses onto someone else
- A defense mechanism whereby a person refuses to recognize or acknowledge something that is painful
- Information processing in our mind that we are not aware of; according to Freud, it holds our unacceptable thoughts, feelings, and memories; according to Jung, it includes patterns
- Universal symbols that tend to reappear over time; includes models of people, behaviours, and personalities
Down
- association A method used in psychoanalysis where a patient relaxes and says whatever comes to mind
- The shift of an emotion from its original focus to another object, person, or situation
- influence the unconscious mind throughout life
- Freud's term for the moral centre of the mind
- theory An approach to therapy that focuses on resolving a patient's conflicted conscious and unconscious feelings psychoanalytic theory
- Psychologists who modified Freud's psychoanalytic theory to include social and cultural aspects
- Freud's theory That all human behaviour is influenced by early childhood and that childhood
- unconscious The shared, inherited pool of memories from our ancestors
- disorder A mental disorder involving anxiety and fear
- Information that we are always aware of; our conscious mind performs the thinking when we take in new information
21 Clues: Freud's term for the moral centre of the mind • influence the unconscious mind throughout life • memories, instincts, and experiences common to all • disorder A mental disorder involving anxiety and fear • The ego's way of distorting reality to deal with anxiety • unconscious The shared, inherited pool of memories from our ancestors • ...
Chapter 7 Economics 2023-02-23
Across
- A product such as petroleum or milk, that is considered the same nomatter who produces or sells it.
- The division of consumers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good
- The expenses a new business must pay before it can begin to produce and sell goods.
- A market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market
- series of competitive price cuts that lowers the market price below the costs of production
- Contract that gives a single firm the right to sell its good within an exlusive market.
Down
- Characteristics that cause a producer's average cost to drop as production rises.
- market structure that are similar but not identical
- A way to attract customers through style, service, or location but not a lower price.
- A market that runs most effiently when one large firm supples all of the output
- A license that gives the inventor of a new product the exclusive right to sell it for a specific period of time
- Any factor that makes it difficult for a new firm to enter a market.
- An illegal agreement among firms to divide the market, set prices, or limit production.
13 Clues: market structure that are similar but not identical • A market structure in which a few large firms dominate a market • Any factor that makes it difficult for a new firm to enter a market. • A market that runs most effiently when one large firm supples all of the output • The division of consumers into groups based on how much they will pay for a good • ...
Biology crossword Puzzle 2023-10-04
Across
- The idea that evolution is a slow process
- Any group of animals that live together and reproduce.
- This part of DNA controls traits
- Difference between members of the same species
- Chimpanzees are humans are these to humans
- any trait that helps an organism survive and reproduce in its environment
- This theory is the main theory used by Scientists
Down
- Placing of events in the order in which they occurred without any relationship to the actual time during which any one event occurred
- A higher amount of this leads to a successful life while a lower leads to death
- A change in genetic material
- no longer on this planet
- This happens to species over time
- paleontologists study these
- This structure has little to no function
- Father of the theory of Evolution
15 Clues: no longer on this planet • paleontologists study these • A change in genetic material • This part of DNA controls traits • This happens to species over time • Father of the theory of Evolution • This structure has little to no function • The idea that evolution is a slow process • Chimpanzees are humans are these to humans • Difference between members of the same species • ...
Business Studies: Business ownership 2023-06-15
Across
- ……………….liability where the owners of a business are not legally responsible for all the debts a business has
- ‘….. limited company’ a business structure that is incorporated and gas shares, but shares can be brought or sold by anyone
- ‘…………… liability’ where the owners of a business are legally responsible for all tge debts of a business
- a business ownership structure in which a small number of people (2-20) own an unincorporated company
- any individual or group of people that is affected by a business
- a business that has its own legal identity
Down
- a business structure where one person owns an unincorporated company
- a business that doesn’t have its own legal identity
- a payment that a shareholder gets if the company makes a profit
- ‘………… limited company’ a business structure that is incorporated and gas shares, but shares can only be sold with the agreement of all the shareholders
- when two companies join together to form a new, larger firm
- where an existing business expands by buying more than half the shares in another firm
- where a company lets a another firm sell its products or use its trademarks in return for a fee or % of the profits
13 Clues: a business that has its own legal identity • a business that doesn’t have its own legal identity • when two companies join together to form a new, larger firm • a payment that a shareholder gets if the company makes a profit • any individual or group of people that is affected by a business • a business structure where one person owns an unincorporated company • ...
Chapter 8 2016-11-20
Across
- there is first perceptual contact
- level is a general idea of the kinds of rewards and profits that you feel you ought to get out of a relationship
- when a dominant person is attracted to someone submissive
- theory uses the ideas of social exchange
- on the other hand is a feeling of a sort of anger
- is the opposite of deterioration
- of a relationship has to do with the number of topics you and your partner talk about
Down
- is a feeling that can be honest and open when talking about yourself
- theory is that relationships friendship and love in particular- are held together by adherence to certain rules
- theory means that a person forms a relationship based on attraction
- principle its likely what your mate, would look, act, and think like yourself
- repair stage is interpersonal repair
- is the actions of one person that have an impact on the other person
- you're attracted to this person because they give you these
- is physical closeness
- stage a sense of mutuality, or being connected
- stage where friendship and romantic bonds are tying together
- of the relationship involves the degree to which you penetrate the inner personality
- cues signs of love towards a person
19 Clues: is physical closeness • is the opposite of deterioration • there is first perceptual contact • cues signs of love towards a person • repair stage is interpersonal repair • theory uses the ideas of social exchange • stage a sense of mutuality, or being connected • on the other hand is a feeling of a sort of anger • when a dominant person is attracted to someone submissive • ...
Famous Scientists 2024-10-01
Across
- Inventor known for his work with electricity and the AC current.
- Pioneered research on radioactivity and won two Nobel Prizes.
- Astronomer who supported the heliocentric theory.
- Developed the theory of relativity.
- Formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection.
Down
- Developed pasteurization and contributed to germ theory.
- Famous for his work on black holes and author of 'A Brief History of Time'.
- Considered the first computer programmer.
- Founder of modern genetics through his study of pea plants.
- Physicist known for the laws of motion and gravity.
10 Clues: Developed the theory of relativity. • Considered the first computer programmer. • Astronomer who supported the heliocentric theory. • Physicist known for the laws of motion and gravity. • Developed pasteurization and contributed to germ theory. • Formulated the theory of evolution by natural selection. • Founder of modern genetics through his study of pea plants. • ...
Psychology Crossword Puzzle 2025-10-24
Across
- investigated the mechanisms of imprinting
- Represenitive
- A process of early learning in which a young animal or infant forms a strong and enduring attachment to the first moving object or individual
- understanding information or ideas
- the person known for the babinski reflex
Down
- American philosopher and psychologist, whose work informed theory and research of memory, dreams and the self
- a primitive involuntary movement present in newborns and infants
- the early language development stage where children use short simple phrases
- A representation of a plan or theory
- known for his sociocultural theory of cognitive development, which posits that social interaction and culture are fundamental to learning
- Swiss psychologist known for their work on child development
- a branch of psychology that studies the physical, cognitive, social, and emotional changes that occur throughout the human lifespan, from conception to death
- thinking only of oneself
- A place to stay
- an involuntary, innate reflex present in newborns that helps them locate and latch onto a food source
- The person who fundamentally changed our understanding of animal and human behavior
- prevention of wasteful use of a resource
17 Clues: Represenitive • A place to stay • thinking only of oneself • understanding information or ideas • A representation of a plan or theory • prevention of wasteful use of a resource • the person known for the babinski reflex • investigated the mechanisms of imprinting • Swiss psychologist known for their work on child development • ...
DNA CROSS WORD PUZZLE 2021-12-12
Across
- - Different beliefs about the universe just like a cosmic egg, a flat island divided by river, and a powerful being created everything.
- - Are rocky objects revolving around the sun that are too small to be called planets.
- - A theory that says the universe began as a small point that expanded rapidly about 13.8 billion years ago.
- - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe.
- - He proposed the geocentric theory.
- - A proof of Big Bang theory that shows a change in frequency of waves of moving objects relative to its source.
- - A scientist who studies objects in space, such as black holes, galaxies, moons, planets, stars, etc.
Down
- - Also called as space junk.
- - A model showing the Sun as a fixed point in the center of the universe with objects revolving around it.
- - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole.
- - A galaxy of no visible pattern.
- - He proposed the heliocentric theory.
- - The path one object takes as it revolves around another object in space.
- - The Sun together with the group of planets and other celestial bodies that revolve around it that are held by its gravitational attraction.
- - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun.
15 Clues: - Also called as space junk. • - A galaxy of no visible pattern. • - He proposed the geocentric theory. • - He proposed the heliocentric theory. • - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun. • - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe. • - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole. • ...
Formation of the Solar System 2025-03-10
Across
- person who first proposed the nebular theory
- Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars are classified as this kind of planet
- this movement made the solar nebula spin faster
- when a nebula is flattened by spinning and gravity
- Jupiter and Saturn are classified as this kind of planet
- these planets form before the inner planets
- once a protoplanet has accumulated enough material to reach a certain size it becomes this
- Uranus and Neptune are classified as this kind of planet
- a contracting mass of gas which represents the step before a star is born
Down
- when rocky, solid, or metal particles accumulate and stick together
- it is believed that this planet most likely formed first
- when icy or gaseous particles accumulate and stick together
- the force that causes the solar nebula to shrink and heat up
- the step that comes after planetesimal and before planet
- theory that states our solar system formed from the collapse of a solar nebula
- the celestial body whose explosion & resulting shockwave triggered the solar nebula to collapse
- rocks from this celestial body provide proof of the nebular theory
- massive rotating cloud of gas and dust
- small, irregularly shaped bodies
- a protostar turns into this once it is hot enough for nuclear fusion to occur
20 Clues: small, irregularly shaped bodies • massive rotating cloud of gas and dust • these planets form before the inner planets • person who first proposed the nebular theory • this movement made the solar nebula spin faster • when a nebula is flattened by spinning and gravity • it is believed that this planet most likely formed first • ...
GROUP 6 ASSESSMENT - FOR TOPICS 1,2, AND 4 2023-07-20
Across
- He is one of the founders of Humanistic Psychology.
- A person's actual and ideal self are consistent/congruent to one another.
- It is a form of self talk that guides the learner’s thinking and action.
- What will you do after you identify the problem?
- In Sociocultural theory, how many factors affecting the development of cognition.
- It guides a tradition of quality early learning.
- The self that we would like to be in the future.
- This is the ability to use one's knowledge effectively.
- This term refers to a competent adult or more advance peer.
- An explanation about something in natural world.
Down
- It is the notion of the self or self-concept.
- It is an act of noticing something carefully in order to gain information.
- It is where creative thinking and risk-taking are features of a person's life.
- It incorporates new research knowledge and science.
- It is the support or assistance that let the learners accomplished a certain task.
- What will you do after you decide what to change?
- What is the letter P stands for the term ZPD in the sociocultural theory?
- This is use to construct decisions about how to handle inappropriate behaviors.
18 Clues: It is the notion of the self or self-concept. • What will you do after you identify the problem? • It guides a tradition of quality early learning. • The self that we would like to be in the future. • An explanation about something in natural world. • What will you do after you decide what to change? • He is one of the founders of Humanistic Psychology. • ...
Plate Tectonics 2024-02-08
Across
- the middle layer of the earth.
- The mechanical model; lithosphere, asthenosphere, mesosphere, outer core, inner core. (look at me on ice)
- a boundary where the plates move away from eachother
- the outer layer of the core.
- a divergent boundary where new crust is formed in the ocean
- the theory that the continents are always moving.
- the cracked-up parts of earths crust.
- when something is pressed together.
- the center of the earth.
- the 3rd mechanical layer
- the 1st mechanical layer
Down
- the theory of plates moving on the asthenosphere
- when the plates slide past eachother
- what something is composed of.
- when the plates come together.
- when one plate (usually the denser, oceanic plate) go under another.
- A long rigid crack in the earths surface.
- the inner layer of earths center
- the very outer layer of the earth.
- the 2nd mechanical layer
20 Clues: the 2nd mechanical layer • the center of the earth. • the 3rd mechanical layer • the 1st mechanical layer • the outer layer of the core. • the middle layer of the earth. • what something is composed of. • when the plates come together. • the inner layer of earths center • the very outer layer of the earth. • when something is pressed together. • ...
Contributions to the Theory of Evolution 2024-09-14
Across
- – "Differences within species"
- – "Preserved remains of organisms"
- – "Father of genetics"
- – "Trait enhancing survival"
- – "Islands key to Darwin’s study"
- – "Natural selection theorist"
- – "Study of early development"
- – "Process favoring certain traits"
Down
- – "Source of genetic variation"
- – "Formation of new species"
- – "Organism’s genetic makeup"
- – "Disappearance of species"
- – "Inheritance of acquired traits"
- – "Darwin’s co-developer"
- – "Ability to survive and reproduce"
15 Clues: – "Father of genetics" • – "Darwin’s co-developer" • – "Formation of new species" • – "Disappearance of species" • – "Trait enhancing survival" • – "Organism’s genetic makeup" • – "Differences within species" • – "Natural selection theorist" • – "Study of early development" • – "Source of genetic variation" • – "Islands key to Darwin’s study" • – "Preserved remains of organisms" • ...
INRS ICE 2015-04-29
Across
- a cluster or set of beliefs in a particular discipline that determine what should be researched
- the study of being or reality
- paradigm concerned with subjective knowledge and understanding
- research where the researcher does not affect the findings of the study
- sampling that involves choosing elements that you wish to include based on a set of characteristics
- basic component of theories
- questions that ask respondents to rate a number of options
- measurement scales that use an absolute zero
- how simply and concisely a theory explains complex aspects
- general to specific reasoning
Down
- research that usually attempts to study an unknown area
- tentative statement about a relationship between variables
- a field research approach that involves describing a culture the researcher is interested in
- variables that are likely to cause an effect
- theory about theory
- sampling that entails first splitting the population into sub-units or levels
- research: characterised by rigorous and systematic investigations
17 Clues: theory about theory • basic component of theories • the study of being or reality • general to specific reasoning • variables that are likely to cause an effect • measurement scales that use an absolute zero • research that usually attempts to study an unknown area • tentative statement about a relationship between variables • ...
Social Impact Theory 2019-03-11
Across
- As Agency theory does not take into account other situational factors aside from the presence of the authority figure, it can be considered...
- Social impact theory simplifies obedience to just a few factors, and so can be considered...
- As we don't get an explanation of WHY people obey this theory can be considered more....
- Agency theory gives an explanation of the effect of obeying on target through the idea of...
Down
- This theory believes that what is happening in the environment influences behaviour; these are called...
- Researcher who's research suggests hat strength of source is more important than the immediacy of the source
- The mathematical calculation of Social Impact is of limited usefulness as strength is difficult to give a numerical value to due to its...
- This theory considers people to not actively consider the messages of sources; they are ....
- The people who are being influenced
- The people trying to influence others
10 Clues: The people who are being influenced • The people trying to influence others • As we don't get an explanation of WHY people obey this theory can be considered more.... • This theory considers people to not actively consider the messages of sources; they are .... • Social impact theory simplifies obedience to just a few factors, and so can be considered... • ...
Theories of Attachement 2014-05-02
Across
- The 'mother' the monkey chose over the feeder
- The type of conditioning studied by Pavlov (dogs)
- Model that was supported by Hazan and Shaver's 'love quiz' experiment
- Pyschologists who disproved that infants only formed attachments to the caregiver (feeder)
- The biological period where attachements are formed
- The animals studied by Harlow and Harlow
- Studied Gosling eggs
Down
- Psychologist who came up with the Evolutionary Theory
- Psychologists who created the theory that attachment is created towards the person who supplies the food
- The template that is made for future relationships
- Attachment based on the principle of conditioning
- The type of conditioning that uses reinforcement
- Special attachement to one person
- Babies crying, smiling in which adults respond to
- Theory that children are born with an innate tendacy to form an attachment that serves to increase their chance of survival
15 Clues: Studied Gosling eggs • Special attachement to one person • The animals studied by Harlow and Harlow • The 'mother' the monkey chose over the feeder • The type of conditioning that uses reinforcement • The type of conditioning studied by Pavlov (dogs) • Attachment based on the principle of conditioning • Babies crying, smiling in which adults respond to • ...
Module Four Economic Terms 2025-06-15
Across
- borrowing money to spend it
- trading of goods or service
- means of payment
- private spending on tools for future output
- money supply of M1 plus saving deposits
- financial obligations a firm owes another
- products produced externally but purchased internally
- money supply composed of currency, checks, etc.
- outputs that provide benefits without product
- money that has no value except for as exchange
- products produced internally but purchased externally
- money that uses an actual good, such as gold or silver
- portions of deposits banks do not loan out
- unemployment caused by economic downturns
- when overall prices fall
- the physical bills/coins used for payments
- GDP adjusted for price changes
Down
- how much your money can buy
- short run fluctuation in economic activity
- percentage of the unemployed labor force
- not employed, but looking unsuccessfully
- items a firm owns
- growth in the overall level of prices in an economy
- balance sheet with assets equal to it's liabilities
- Short term economic downturn
- unemployment caused by time-lags in finding employees
- unemployment due to changes in the structure of the economy
27 Clues: means of payment • items a firm owns • when overall prices fall • borrowing money to spend it • how much your money can buy • trading of goods or service • Short term economic downturn • GDP adjusted for price changes • money supply of M1 plus saving deposits • percentage of the unemployed labor force • not employed, but looking unsuccessfully • ...
Continental Drift and Plate Tectonics 2025-05-05
Across
- (sound navigation and ranging) is a technology that uses sound waves to detect and navigate in water.
- is a force that drives plate tectonics, specifically at mid-ocean ridges.
- the pulling force exerted by a cold, dense oceanic plate plunging into the mantle due to its own weight.
- is the theory that the Earth's surface is made of tectonic plates that move over the mantle.
- the slow, circular movement of material within Earth's mantle, driven by heat from the core and radioactive decay.
- is a tectonic plate boundary where two tectonic plates slide past each other horizontally.
- a change in the Earth's magnetic field where the magnetic north and south poles switch places.
Down
- are huge pieces of Earth's crust and upper mantle that move slowly over time.
- are localized zones of intense heat in Earth's mantle, beneath the crust, that cause volcanic activity.
- a deep, elongated depression in the Earth's crust that forms when tectonic plates pull apart.
- proposed the theory of seafloor spreading
- a supercontinent that existed during the late Paleozoic and early Mesozoic eras, approximately 300 to 200 million years ago
- the theory that Earth's continents move over time.
- proposed the Continental Drift theory
- the downward movement of the edge of a plate of the earth's crust into the mantle beneath another plate.
15 Clues: proposed the Continental Drift theory • proposed the theory of seafloor spreading • the theory that Earth's continents move over time. • is a force that drives plate tectonics, specifically at mid-ocean ridges. • are huge pieces of Earth's crust and upper mantle that move slowly over time. • ...
5 Week Review 2024-10-03
Across
- Conflict that occurs from an outside source
- The beginning of a story, the normal for that world
- ________ Action, the easing of conflicts and start to return to normal
- Social theory favoring success of the group
- The times before that of Anthem
- Protagonist in Anthem
- The major turning point or most exciting part of a plot
- The sequence of events in a story
Down
- The end events of plot, the new normal, denouement
- They of the half brain
- The St. of the ________
- Conflict that occurs within a character
- A brief overview of major plot events
- Short sentence starter that introduces a quote
- Social theory favoring personal freedom
- The best friend in Anthem
- A universal lesson
- The struggle or problem that a character faces in a story
- Method we use to write effective paragraphs
- Author of Anthem
- Love interest in Anthem
- _________ Action, the conflicts that begin to accrue as a story develops
22 Clues: Author of Anthem • A universal lesson • Protagonist in Anthem • They of the half brain • The St. of the ________ • Love interest in Anthem • The best friend in Anthem • The times before that of Anthem • The sequence of events in a story • A brief overview of major plot events • Conflict that occurs within a character • Social theory favoring personal freedom • ...
Chapter 33 Review 2018-04-26
Across
- The man who discovered the force called gravity
- Made the theory of a heliocentric universe
- The theory that the sun is the center of the solar system
- Discovered that the planets have oval orbits
- Two major sources guiding Europeans' thinking
- Rene Descartes and Francis Bacon invented this
- The man who made the telescope stronger and probably made the first thermometer
- This organization got into a bitter conflict with Galileo
- Evangelista Torricelli invented this tool to measure atmospheric pressure
Down
- The first person to view live bacteria under a microscope
- This person made a new measure of temperature and improved upon the thermometer
- A major shift in thinking between 1500 and 1700
- A belief in reason and logic as the primary paths to knowledge
- The theory that the earth is the center of the solar system
- an idea to be tested in an experiment
- The person who thought that the Earth was in the middle of the universe and that there were only three continents
16 Clues: an idea to be tested in an experiment • Made the theory of a heliocentric universe • Discovered that the planets have oval orbits • Two major sources guiding Europeans' thinking • Rene Descartes and Francis Bacon invented this • The man who discovered the force called gravity • A major shift in thinking between 1500 and 1700 • ...
The Big Bang :) 2024-03-22
Across
- First epoch and started as a singular hot and dense point (2 words no space)
- Massive object formed in space that emits a lot of energy and contains of a black hole and an accretion disk
- the process that was halted only 20 minutes after the Big Bang began
- Process of light elements formation
- In the Photon Epoch, the universe was filled with what?
- What remains of the very first light that traveled through the universe (3 letter abbreviation)
- Single hot and dense point at the beginning of the Big Bang
- Atomic clouds of hydrogen and helium form in the... (2 Words)
- Current most plausible theory regarding the formation of the universe (2 words don't include "theory")
Down
- The fundamental force not listed here: weak nuclear force, strong nuclear force and gravity
- Believed the universe stemmed from a single primeval atom
- Closest planet to us that is outside the solar system (2 words and a b at the end no space)
- Subatomic Particles began to form in this epoch (2 words don't include "epoch")
- most common type of lepton
- most common type of antilepton
- The current epoch we are in (2 words)
- He proposed the theory of General Relativity
- AKA "Radiation Domination" (2 words)
- Fundamental particle that makes up all hadrons
- Quarks begin to combine, forming hadrons (2 words)
20 Clues: most common type of lepton • most common type of antilepton • Process of light elements formation • AKA "Radiation Domination" (2 words) • The current epoch we are in (2 words) • He proposed the theory of General Relativity • Fundamental particle that makes up all hadrons • Quarks begin to combine, forming hadrons (2 words) • ...
AAA Activity 2 Team 3 2024-12-29
Across
- Include audit methodologies, implementation tools, auditing guides, templates and checklists
- An unintentional misstatement in financial statements
- A person in the organisation is nominated to receive disclosures on money laundering
- The committee should have at least 3 members (2 for smaller companies)
Down
- Regulator to be informed about money laundering offences
- leads the board and is responsible for its overall effectiveness
- Reason for changing auditor
- Which logo should be separate from the logo of the firm
- Gap between an auditor’s actual standards of performance and what the public expects of his performance
9 Clues: Reason for changing auditor • An unintentional misstatement in financial statements • Which logo should be separate from the logo of the firm • Regulator to be informed about money laundering offences • leads the board and is responsible for its overall effectiveness • The committee should have at least 3 members (2 for smaller companies) • ...
Psychology 2017-10-03
Across
- The process of looking inside of yourself and describing whats there
- Behaviour viewed as strongly influenced by certain social or ethnic groups
- Those who make direct use of the findings of research psychologists
- Psychologists in this area "take sides"
- Behaviour viewed as a reflection of internal growth
- General framework for scientific study
- Published Theory of evolution
- Those who study the origin, cause, or result of certain behaviours
- This group works with people who have marital, personal, or mental problems
- Psychologists in this area tend to take sides
- Behaviour viewed in terms of biological responses
Down
- Behaviour viewed as a product of various internal sentences or thoughts
- This group works in the school setting
- Studied learning during 1920
- Behaviour viewed as a reflection of unconscious aggressive and sexual impulses
- Studied the effects of the environment
- These psychologists work in industry's or university's and preform research
- The process of making your own system by borrowing from two or more other systems
- Developed a personality theory and treated people from 1800 to 1900
- Studied personal growth
- This group works in industry or the government and works to study the environment
- Behaviour viewed as a product of learned responses
- The scientific study of human and animal behaviour
- Opened the first psychology lab
- Published widely used psychology textbook
25 Clues: Studied personal growth • Studied learning during 1920 • Published Theory of evolution • Opened the first psychology lab • This group works in the school setting • Studied the effects of the environment • General framework for scientific study • Psychologists in this area "take sides" • Published widely used psychology textbook • Psychologists in this area tend to take sides • ...
Deviance 2022-05-24
Across
- _________ view deviance as a natural outgrowth of values and structure in a society
- _________ theory states deviance is a learned behavior and that individuals will adopt behavior
- the norms of society are unclear and no longer apply
- _______ theory is the theory that functionalists believe in
Down
- ________ are best known for three ideas being labeling, cultural transmission, and control
- the tendency of a criminal to re-offend
- creating jobs, unifying, and promoting change are all _______ functions of deviance
- ______theory states that a deviant individual is "labled" as such
- any behavior that violates social norms
- a mark of social disgrace that sets the deviant apart from society
- deviant behavior is based on ____ so different across different cultures and time
- _______ theory states that deviance is normal and people conform when they have strong ties to the community
- ________ theorists view deviance as being set by the higher class of people to have them use it to maintain power
13 Clues: the tendency of a criminal to re-offend • any behavior that violates social norms • the norms of society are unclear and no longer apply • _______ theory is the theory that functionalists believe in • ______theory states that a deviant individual is "labled" as such • a mark of social disgrace that sets the deviant apart from society • ...
Marginal Product of Labour (MPL) 2024-02-24
Across
- In a competitive labor market, the wage rate equals the ________ product of labor.
- The marginal product of labor curve typically slopes ________, reflecting diminishing returns.
- If the marginal product of labor is increasing, the total product of labor is ________.
- A firm maximizes profit by hiring workers up to the point where the marginal product of labor equals the ________.
- The marginal product of labor represents the additional output gained from hiring one more ________.
Down
- When the marginal product of labor is decreasing, the total product of labor is ________.
- A firm may experience negative marginal returns when hiring too ________ workers.
- When the marginal product of labor equals the wage rate, a firm achieves ________ efficiency.
- As more workers are hired, the marginal product of labor typically ________, due to diminishing returns.
- To calculate the marginal product of labor, divide the change in ________ by the change in labor input.
10 Clues: A firm may experience negative marginal returns when hiring too ________ workers. • In a competitive labor market, the wage rate equals the ________ product of labor. • If the marginal product of labor is increasing, the total product of labor is ________. • When the marginal product of labor is decreasing, the total product of labor is ________. • ...
DNA CROSS WORD PUZZLE 2021-12-12
Across
- - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole.
- - The path one object takes as it revolves around another object in space.
- - Also called as space junk.
- - He proposed the heliocentric theory.
- - A model showing the Sun as a fixed point in the center of the universe with objects revolving around it.
- - A proof of Big Bang theory that shows a change in frequency of waves of moving objects relative to its source.
- - A galaxy of no visible pattern.
Down
- - The Sun together with the group of planets and other celestial bodies that revolve around it that are held by its gravitational attraction.
- - A scientist who studies objects in space, such as black holes, galaxies, moons, planets, stars, etc.
- - Different beliefs about the universe just like a cosmic egg, a flat island divided by river, and a powerful being created everything.
- - A theory that says the universe began as a small point that expanded rapidly about 13.8 billion years ago.
- - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun.
- - He proposed the geocentric theory.
- - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe.
- - Are rocky objects revolving around the sun that are too small to be called planets.
15 Clues: - Also called as space junk. • - A galaxy of no visible pattern. • - He proposed the geocentric theory. • - He proposed the heliocentric theory. • - An icy body of frozen gas orbiting the sun. • - A model showing Earth located at the center of the universe. • - The study of celestial objects, space, and the universe as a whole. • ...
Vocabulary Week 11 2025-01-21
Across
- adj. clearly stated so there is no room for confusion or questions
- v. suggest or call attention to indirectly; hint at
- adj. implied or suggested, but not clearly stated
Down
- n. the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence
- n. a conclusion made based on both information/evidence and reasoning
5 Clues: adj. implied or suggested, but not clearly stated • v. suggest or call attention to indirectly; hint at • n. the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence • adj. clearly stated so there is no room for confusion or questions • n. a conclusion made based on both information/evidence and reasoning
Vocab Project #3 2020-11-17
Across
- A close friend of Mr. Frank's from 1933, who helped them with the move, and brings supplies for them. She has a husband named Henk.
- Wessel Anne's first love/crush
- Anne's birth month
- a heated argument or disagreement, typically about a trivial issue and between people who are usually on good term
- unnecessary, especially through being more than enough
- a building joined to or associated with a main building providing additional space or accommodations
- wildly unreasonable, illogical, or inappropriate
- of little value or importance
- the subject Anne had to write about after Mr. Keptor told her she talked too much
- Anne's older sister
- Goudsmit Anne's kind neighbor who they asked to take care of the house and her cat in a letter.
- a person filled with excessive and single-minded zeal especially for an extreme religious or political cause
- a feeling of pensive sadness, typically with no obvious
- Annex What Anne calls the attic in the warehouse they hide in.
- in a way that shows a casual and cheerful indifference considered to be callous or improper
- the action of surrendering or ceasing to resist an opponent or demand
Down
- in disorderly haste or confusion
- pain in the muscles and joints of the lower back
- Anne's family is targeted by the Germans because they are ______
- the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence
- enthusiastic or passionate
- Daan's the family Anne's family goes into hiding with.
- one’s thoughts or secrets
- be a sign that (something) is about to happen
- Van Daan Anne's father's friend who works in the business with her dad.
- give or apportion (something) to someone as a share or task
- a personal possession
- Goldberg Anne's boyfriend before she went into hiding.
- Anne's cat whom she had to leave behind when going into hiding
- What Anne calls her diary
30 Clues: Anne's birth month • Anne's older sister • a personal possession • one’s thoughts or secrets • What Anne calls her diary • enthusiastic or passionate • of little value or importance • Wessel Anne's first love/crush • in disorderly haste or confusion • be a sign that (something) is about to happen • pain in the muscles and joints of the lower back • ...
The Neutral Theory of Evolution 2013-09-21
Across
- the process of random fluctuation in allele frequencies due to sampling effects
- a technique used by evolutionary biologists to approximate the time two species diverged (hint: 2 words, no space)
- also known as silent mutations, this type of substitution results in a change in nucleotide sequence that doesn't affect the amino acid (protein) sequence
- a form of natural selection that selects for an advantageous trait/mutation in a population
- the ________ neutral theory of evolution takes into account the deleterious and advantageous mutations at the molecular level
Down
- the evolutionary theory which says that many amino acid and nucleotide substitutions have little or no functional consequence and thus aren't strongly constrained by natural selection.
- a mutation where a purine is exchanged for another purine or a pyrimidine for another pyrimidine; a synonymous ________
- a type of substitution that results in the changing of the nucleotide sequence, which in turn changes the amino acid (protein) sequence
- a mutation where a purine is exchanged for pyrimidine or vice versa; a synonymous ____________
- this form of natural selection selects against an advantageous trait/mutation in a population
- greatest EEB390 GSI ever
11 Clues: greatest EEB390 GSI ever • the process of random fluctuation in allele frequencies due to sampling effects • a form of natural selection that selects for an advantageous trait/mutation in a population • this form of natural selection selects against an advantageous trait/mutation in a population • ...
The Theory of Plate Tectonics 2023-11-21
Across
- A piece of giant rock on the crust
- Sea Floor _________________
- Violent shaking of the Earth's crust
- When one plate moves under another
- Outer most layer of the Earth
- The idea that continents moved apart from Pangaea
Down
- Person who came up with the idea of plate tectonics
- _________________ Currents
- The plate that Brazil sits on
- The plate that Ireland sits on
- Major oceanic plate in the middle of the Ring of Fire
11 Clues: _________________ Currents • Sea Floor _________________ • The plate that Brazil sits on • Outer most layer of the Earth • The plate that Ireland sits on • A piece of giant rock on the crust • When one plate moves under another • Violent shaking of the Earth's crust • The idea that continents moved apart from Pangaea • Person who came up with the idea of plate tectonics • ...
Plate Tectonics 2019-03-07
Across
- Scientists that developed the theory of continental drift
- The theory that the Earth's crust is cracked into many large pieces that move on the aesthenosphere
- Crust and uppermost solid mantle, sits on aesthenosphere
- the crust that forms the continents
- The process of new crust forming at the ocean ridges and spreading outward
- plates colliding with each other
- plates moving apart from each other
Down
- The oceanic crust collides with the continental crust and sinks below it
- A layer of 'plastic' semi-solid rock in the lower mantle
- The movement of lava in the aesthenosphere
- The separating of continents by drifting by drifting across the oceans
- Scientists who developed the theory of seafloor spreading
- plates sliding parallel to each other but in opposite directions
- patterns of magnetism trapped in rocks on each side of plate boundaries
14 Clues: plates colliding with each other • the crust that forms the continents • plates moving apart from each other • The movement of lava in the aesthenosphere • A layer of 'plastic' semi-solid rock in the lower mantle • Crust and uppermost solid mantle, sits on aesthenosphere • Scientists that developed the theory of continental drift • ...
Sociology 2026-03-11
Across
- The study of the brain and mental processes.
- Societal rules (Cheating, neglecting a child).
- Theory that society is a set of interdependent parts.
- Influenced by Darwin.
- Shared beliefs about what is good and bad.
- The exaorganizationorganizatoin and operation of government.
- Study of past events.
- He was interested in "Verstehen".
- Written rules of conduct enforced by the government.
- Knowledge, skills, tools, or a combination of objects and how to use them.
- Choices people make based on their needs and wants.
- Shaking hands, saying hello.
- Creator of communism.
- How people relate to one another and influence their behavior.
Down
- Something that represents something else.
- Shared rules of conduct that tell people how to act in a specific situation.
- Father of sociology/ "statics vs. dynamics".
- Believed sociology could only be studied through statistics.
- A group of interdependent people organized to share a common culture.
- Theory that change is most often created by competition or social disruptions.
- Physical objects.
- Abstract human creations.
- Comparing past and present cultures.
- Organization of written/spoken symbols into a standardized system.
- Theory focusing on how people relate to each other in everyday situations.
- Consists of all the shared products in human groups.
- The social science that studies human society and social behavior.
27 Clues: Physical objects. • Influenced by Darwin. • Study of past events. • Creator of communism. • Abstract human creations. • Shaking hands, saying hello. • He was interested in "Verstehen". • Comparing past and present cultures. • Something that represents something else. • Shared beliefs about what is good and bad. • The study of the brain and mental processes. • ...
