theory of the firm Crossword Puzzles
Selecting and Defining a Research Problem 2023-02-20
Across
- ___ experience is a common way to identify research problems
- a repetition of a study using different subjects to retest its hypothesis
- an organized body of concepts, generalizations, and principles that can be investigated
- A ___ hypothesis is a prediction about the research findings
- A ______ hypothesis is derived from theory and provides evidence that supports, expands, or contradicts the theory
- _______ should be stated in measurable terms
- A ____ of the problem is the first component of both a research plan and the completed research report
Down
- A good problem is ______ using the collection and analysis of data
- The general problem area must be _____ to the area
- In the formula, PXY, P stands for ____
10 Clues: In the formula, PXY, P stands for ____ • _______ should be stated in measurable terms • The general problem area must be _____ to the area • ___ experience is a common way to identify research problems • A ___ hypothesis is a prediction about the research findings • A good problem is ______ using the collection and analysis of data • ...
The Enemy - Ch. 1 Voc. 2022-02-10
14 Clues: make • hurry • endless • clothes • serious • lovingly • bent down • recklessly • a big wave • move with a curling motion • wanting something very much • a feeling of intense distaste • lacking the ability or strength to move • a firm decision to do (or not) something
Theories of Crime Causation 2021-02-24
Across
- Can be defined as something that makes us what we are and also that which makes us different from others.
- Complex is a lack of self-worth, doubt, and certainty about oneself, and feeling of not measuring up to standards
- It can be defined as simply as new idea, device, or method
- Can be considered to be the conscience of mind because it has the ability to distinguish between realities as well as right or wrong.
- A person convicted of new crime who was previously convicted of a crime.
- Is the emotion characterized by antagonism toward someone or something you feel has deliberately done by wrong.
- Referring to individual who have active imagination
- theory states that society puts pressure on individual to achieve socially accepted goals (such as the American Dream) though they lack the means this lead to strain which may lead individual to commit crimes.
- Disorder are those that characterized by excessive and persistent fear, worry, anxiety and related behavioral disturbance.
- It is the primary basis of the idea concerning criminal behavior, the concept that “criminals are born”. SigmundFreud Founder of psychoanalysis, suggested that an individual’s psychological well – being is dependent on healthy interaction among the id, ego and superego
- according to this school of thought, patriarchy meaning that male domination over male keeps women more attached to family, children, and home.
- Otherwise known as Pleasure principle
- The practice of having sexual relations with emotional indifference on a promiscuous and mercenary basis.
- The result of blocking or a person’s effort to attain goal.
- This theory maintains that human behavior is develop through learning experience.
- Was time of severe punishment and harsh torture for crimes that today would seem trivial.
- Is an extremely strong feeling of affection and it is the feeling that makes people feel good, feel happy, and makes the life beautiful as it is.
- the tendency to align attitudes, beliefs, and behavior with those around you
- Is any material intended primarily to arouse sexual desires, pertaining to obscene literature and or lascivious materials in the form of mail or written media, television, telephone and radio
- Category of crime that include among other crimes such as burglary, larceny, theft, vandalism arson and shoplifting.
- can simply define as the breach of laws that are laid down by ruling authority of the land.
- It is the unlawful killing of human being with malice and with “act of violence
- Committed by structured groups typically involving distribution and sale of illegal goods and services.
- Someone who terminates the life of another person unlawfully
Down
- theory is the idea that people who violate the law learn to neutralize the orthodox attitude and values of society, allowing them to drift between outlaw and orthodox behavior
- Is the emotion you feel when you are satisfied and happy when your mind is at ease.
- It is the unlawful burning of property of another person.
- Focuses on personal ability to control impulses and exercise self-control
- Is believed to be process by which individuals are possessed by malevolent preternatural beings, commonly referred to devils.
- This theory proposes that the fundamental or primary causes of delinquent behavior is a weakening of bonds to conventional society
- Theory of how the self-identity and behavior of individual may be determined of influenced by the term used to describe or classify them. It is associated with the concept of self-fulfilling prophecy and stereotyping.
- He explain his theory that Humans, like other animals, are parasites
- Characterized by sociability, excitement, and stimulation
- People with this disorder experience intense emotional instability, particularly in relationship with others
- is when someone rejects traditional cultural goals, but still adheres to the usual steps to obtaining those goals. Reject goals and accept or adhered to institutionalized means of obtaining them.
- Is a theory of learning and social behavior which proposed that new behavior can be acquired by observing and imitating others.
- Says that crime is essential ingredients of a healthy society.
- Is defined as an inability of community members to achieve shared values or to solved jointly experienced problems.
- Adopted the concept of social disorganization to explain increases in a crime that accompanied the transformation of preliterate and peasant societies.
- Aims to improve an individual’s well-being and mental health, to resolve or mitigate troublesome behaviors, beliefs, compulsions, thought or emotion and to improve relationship and social skills.
- BENTHAM The founder of utilitarianism
- Criminal acts committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his or her occupation.
- Colorless, tasteless clear liquid, which gives a burning sensation to the mouth, esophagus, and stomach
- Theory is the belief that individuals choose to commit a crime, looking at the opportunities before them, weighting the benefits versus the punishment and deciding whether to proceed of not.
- Involves an inability to control the impulse to steal. People who have this will often steal things that they do not really need or what have no real monetary value.
- Crimes refer to those crime that were initiated but not completed, and acts that assist in the commission of another crime
- One who make arrangements for killings and injuring the members or non – members
- is considered to be the founder of the psychodynamic approach to psychology which looks closely at the unconscious drives that motivate people to act in certain ways.
- Conscious policy and practice of taking advantage of circumstances- with little regard for principles or with what the consequences are for other.
- Crimes against person or property that committed while invoking prejudices of race, gender, or gender identity, religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity
50 Clues: Otherwise known as Pleasure principle • BENTHAM The founder of utilitarianism • Referring to individual who have active imagination • It is the unlawful burning of property of another person. • Characterized by sociability, excitement, and stimulation • It can be defined as simply as new idea, device, or method • ...
Parts Of The Cell 2023-12-15
Across
- The brains of the cell and stores DNA
- scientific theory stating living organisms are made of cells
- Membrane inclosed organelle containing digestive enzymes
- Cylindrical shaped organelles present near the nucleus play a vital role in cell division
- Transportation system for the cell
- The movement of molecules across a semi permeable membrane for areas of high concentration to low
- Eukaryotic cell with a membrane bound nucleus
- Located in nucleus and is responsible for making ribosomes
Down
- largest organelle in the cell moves proteins and lipids for the cell to use
- A living organism made up of one cell
- Helps cells maintain shape and internal organization
- Minute particles of RNA and proteins sight of protein synthesis
- living organism made of more than one cell
- Cary out oxidative reactions and generate hydrogen peroxide
- Small cellular containers that preform a variety of functions
- The semi fluid substance filling the inside of the cell
- A cell that has a cell wall and organelles
17 Clues: Transportation system for the cell • A living organism made up of one cell • The brains of the cell and stores DNA • living organism made of more than one cell • A cell that has a cell wall and organelles • Eukaryotic cell with a membrane bound nucleus • Helps cells maintain shape and internal organization • The semi fluid substance filling the inside of the cell • ...
Plate Tectonics 2022-02-18
Across
- The location where two or more plates meet. (2 words, no spaces)
- the movement of material caused by differences in temperature and density. (2 words, no spaces)
- This occurs at divergent boundaries where new ocean floor is formed. (2 words, no spaces)
- German scientist that developed the theory of continental drift. He did not have any proof for how it happened, but he had evidence of fossils and landforms being identical in different parts of the world. (2 words, no spaces)
- a v-shaped valley formed at a subduction zone. (2 words, no spaces.
- The location where oceanic crusts sinks beneath less dense continental crust. (2 words, no spaces)
- The highly-active volcanic area around the Pacific Ocean where multiple plates meet. (3 words, no spaces)
- the name of Alfred Wegener's hypothesized supercontinent.
- when two tectonic plates move away from each other. (2 words, no spaces)
- the landform that is created when two pieces of continental crust separate. (2 words, no spaces)
Down
- The layer of the earth that makes up the upper mantle and crust.
- the scientific term used to explain how or why something occurs in the natural world.
- when two plates move towards each other. (2 words, no spaces)
- A break or crack in the Earth's plate.
- the location where energy is released to cause an earthquake.
- hot molten rock INSIDE the mantle
- The theory developed by Alfred Wegener that states that Earth's plates were once one supercontinent and over thousands of years they broke apart into the continents we have today. (2 words, no spaces)
- a trace of an ancient organism (plant or animal) that has been preserved in rock.
18 Clues: hot molten rock INSIDE the mantle • A break or crack in the Earth's plate. • the name of Alfred Wegener's hypothesized supercontinent. • when two plates move towards each other. (2 words, no spaces) • the location where energy is released to cause an earthquake. • The layer of the earth that makes up the upper mantle and crust. • ...
ENLIGHTENMENT AND REVOLUTION 2021-03-15
Across
- A strong advocate of education for women.
- An intelectual movement that stressed reason and thought and the power of individuals to solve problems.
- A new way of thinking of the natural world.
- Agreement in which people created a government.
- Logical procedure for gathering and testing ideas.
- The powers of government divided into 3 different branches.
- Monarchs that embrace the new ideas and made reforms that reflected the enlightenment spirit.
- Italian scientist who built new theories about astronomy.
- Scientists that believe that people could apply reason to all aspects of life.
- The most brilliant and influential of the philosophers.
- A setup built by the federal system.
Down
- English who helped to bring together the breakthroughs under a single theory of motion.
- French writer that studied political liberty.
- The earth center viewed of the universe.
- The daughter of a minor German prince who married the Grand Duke Peter.
- A not completed theory that tries to explain why the planets orbit the way they do.
- A philosopher who held a different and more positive view of human nature.
- agreement among member of society submitted to an autoritarian ruler to prevent disorder.
- A formal summary of the rights and liberties believed essential to people.
- Great philosopher was passionately commited to individual freedom.
20 Clues: A setup built by the federal system. • The earth center viewed of the universe. • A strong advocate of education for women. • A new way of thinking of the natural world. • French writer that studied political liberty. • Agreement in which people created a government. • Logical procedure for gathering and testing ideas. • ...
american government crossword 2022-01-15
Across
- sovereignty meaning that people are the rulers
- a place where women went to, to discuss and exchange ideas
- the branch of government that puts laws into effect
- of the governed the government should be justified only when consented to by the people or citizens
- the branch of government that keeps laws intact through the lawmaking process
- social contract the belief that the government should serve the people
- of laws a political theory that Montesquieu wrote
- type of government in which an individual ruler functions as head of state
- a document that constitutes the legal policies
- the president's right to reject a decision
Down
- believed in direct democracy
- a unit of people who agree on ideas
- - rules that help the countries or states not be so chaotic
- known as the father of liberalism, said that the natural rights are life, liberty, and property
- believed in the social contract and wrote leviathan
- Enlightenment time period where philosophers had different ideas about how humans should live
- rights life, liberty, and property
- government a government that is restricted by specific principles
- Carta the first attempt to limit the kings power
- had the theory of separation of powers, also known for the spirit of laws and checks and balances
20 Clues: believed in direct democracy • rights life, liberty, and property • a unit of people who agree on ideas • the president's right to reject a decision • sovereignty meaning that people are the rulers • a document that constitutes the legal policies • Carta the first attempt to limit the kings power • of laws a political theory that Montesquieu wrote • ...
Sensations and Perceptions Vocabulary Crossword 2017-11-13
Across
- chamber in ear that contains hammer, anvil and stirrup that concetrate vibrations of the eardrum
- study of paranormal things like esp and psychokenisis
- the minimum stimulation needed to detect a particular stimulus 50 percent of the time
- when paying attention to certain part of visual scene, most fail to see major changes in other parts
- ability to see things in three dimensions when images are two dimensionalallowing distance to be judged
- receptors that detect black and white, AND PERIPHERARL AND TWILIGHT VISION
- pitch we hear linked with the place where the cochlea's membrane is stimulated.
- a theory predicting how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimuli, no single absolut threshold, just stored informations for short time
- nerve cells that respond to certain features
- hearing loss caused by damage to cochleas receptor cells or audtiory nerves, also called nerve deafness
- property of sound waves dependent of frequency
- focal point of eye, where there are most cones
- organization of the visual field into objects that stand out from their surroundings
- tube in ear that contains flueid that moves from vibrations
- depth cues that use both eyes
- tendency when percieving to organize stimuli into similiar groups
- opposite color receptors allow color vision, show cause of afterimages
- information processing lefd by higher level mental processes and constructing perceptions
- amount of energy in a wave, or amplitude
- sense of body movement and position, including the sense of balance
- system for sensing the position and movement of individual body parts
- carries neural impulses from eye to brain
- innermost part of eear with cochlea, and vestibular sacks
- device for cochlea to convert sound into electrical input and simulate auditory senses
- depth cues that only require one eye
- activation of associations
- diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation
- detection of stimuli below absolute threshold
Down
- place on eye with no receptors
- property of color determined by wavelength , color names
- something percieved as a whole and not parts
- only being able to attend to a selective amount of sensory information at a time
- sense of hearing
- inner surface of eye that has photoreceptors and neurons
- percieving familiar objects as having same color even if they dont
- percieving ojects as not having changed even if light or image changed
- conversion from one form of energy to another such A FROM STIMULUS ENERGIES TO NEURAL IMPULSES
- transparent layer behind pupil that helps focus images on retina
- mental predisposition to percieve certain things and not other things
- rate of nerve impulses traveling up the auditory nerve matches the frequency of a tone, enabling us to sense its pitch.
- retina contain three receptors each receptive to red, green, and blue that commined make any color
- the minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the tim
- receptors for daylight with color and details
- lack of attention that causes sensory information is recieved but not percieved
- the influence of bodily sensations, gestures, and other states on cognitive preferences and judgments
- hearing loss cause by mechanical syste failing to send sound waves to cochlea
- rate at which wave travels in cycles
- some senses influence other senses like smell and taste
- tests depth perception
- analysis that goes from sense receptors to brain integrating sensory information
- claims of sensing non sensory input like telepathy and precognition
- binocular cue to find depth by comparing images from each eye
- processing multipple stimuli at once
- spinal cord has gats that can block pain signals or allow them to pass
- study of relationship between intensity of stimuli and our psychological experiences with those changes
- illusion of movement caused by two or more adjacent lights blinking on and off in rapid succession
- ability to adjust to altered percieved reality
- to be percieved as different, stimuli must differ by constant minimum percentage
- distance between peaks of waves
- eyes lens changing shape to focus images
- opening in center of eye where light enters
- process where brain sorts, identifies and arranges raw data it recieves from the senses
- process where brain takes in information from senses
- colored part of eye that controls pupil
64 Clues: sense of hearing • tests depth perception • activation of associations • depth cues that use both eyes • place on eye with no receptors • distance between peaks of waves • rate at which wave travels in cycles • processing multipple stimuli at once • depth cues that only require one eye • colored part of eye that controls pupil • eyes lens changing shape to focus images • ...
Creation Stories 2025-04-08
Across
- for the three Hindu Gods
- Another name for God or higher power
- Charles Darwin's theory
- God is seen as the ____ of the world
- First book in the Bible
Down
- someone who believes in a strict literal interpretation of a sacred text
- Hawking Famous physicist and atheist
- Name of Garden where Adam and Eve were
- Story passed down through generations to explain complicated questions
- Fruit Adam and Eve ate
- Type of flower that carried brahma in Hindu creation story
- Bang Scientific theory of the start of the universe
12 Clues: Fruit Adam and Eve ate • Charles Darwin's theory • First book in the Bible • for the three Hindu Gods • Hawking Famous physicist and atheist • Another name for God or higher power • God is seen as the ____ of the world • Name of Garden where Adam and Eve were • Bang Scientific theory of the start of the universe • ...
Coral Reefs 2014-03-06
Across
- firm and stiff
- one of the three groups of the great barrier reef
- they swim in the sea
- a yellowish-brown symbolic present
- easily broken or damaged
- a nonflowering sea plant
- a plant of a butterfly
Down
- it is a living thing
- the biggest reef in Australia
- a group of animals
- warmer water
- animals found in the ocean
- a hard rock used to build materials
- a small growth
14 Clues: warmer water • firm and stiff • a small growth • a group of animals • it is a living thing • they swim in the sea • a plant of a butterfly • easily broken or damaged • a nonflowering sea plant • animals found in the ocean • the biggest reef in Australia • a yellowish-brown symbolic present • a hard rock used to build materials • one of the three groups of the great barrier reef
Economics: Chapter 4 & 5 2021-09-08
Across
- production period long enough to change the amount of variable and fixed inputs used in production
- government payment to encourage or protect a certain economic entity
- total amount earned by a firm from the sale of its products
- total output or production by a firm
- the percentage change in the independent variable (usually price) causes a less than proportional change in the dependent variable
- amount of a product a producer or seller would be willing to offer for sale at all possible prices in a market at a given point in time
- average price that every unit of output sells for
- competing products that can be used in place of one another
- production level where total cos equals total revenue
- sum of variable cost plus fixed cost
- broad category of fixed cost that includes interest, rent, taxes, and executive salaries
Down
- additional satisfaction or usefulness obtained from acquiring or consuming one more unit of a product
- costs of production that do not change when output changes
- principle that more will be offered for sale at higher prices than at lower prices
- production cost that varies as output changes
- production period so short that only variable inputs (usually labor) can be changed
- extra revenue from the sale of one additional unit of output
- something that motivates
- combination of quantities that someone would b willing and able to buy over a range of possible prices at a given moment
- products that increase the use of other products
- a change in the independent variable (usually price) results in a larger change in the dependent variable
- rule stating that more will be demanded at lower prices and less at higher prices
22 Clues: something that motivates • total output or production by a firm • sum of variable cost plus fixed cost • production cost that varies as output changes • products that increase the use of other products • average price that every unit of output sells for • production level where total cos equals total revenue • costs of production that do not change when output changes • ...
Abnormal Psychology and the Treatment of Psychological Disorders 2016-04-25
Across
- The specific field in psychology concerned with psychology’s impact on health, physical well being, and illness.
- A persistent and seemingly uncontrollable thought.
- Treatment involving family members which seeks to change the unhealthy familial patterns and interactions.
- The treatment approach based on the theory that our cognitions or thoughts control a large part of our behaviors and emotions. Therefore, changing the way we think can result in positive changes in the way we act and feel.
- A treatment technique where the client is exposed to gradually increasing anxiety provoking stimuli while relaxing; the goal is for the client to eventually confront a phobia or fear without the previously associated anxiety.
- Causal relationships of diseases; theories regarding how the specific disease or disorder began.
- Psychotherapy conducted with at least three or four non-related individuals who are similar in some are, such as gender, age, mental illness, or presenting problem.
- The physiological and psychological reaction to an expected danger, whether real or imagined.
- Intense feelings directed toward the therapist that many clients experience in the process of therapy
- A type of behavioral treatment where an aversive stimuli is paired with a negative behavior in hopes that the behavior will change in the future to avoid the aversive stimuli.
- A condition in which arousal and/or sexual gratification is attained through inanimate objects (shoes, pantyhose) or non-sexual body parts (feet, hair). Is considered a problem when the object is needed in order to obtain arousal or gratification and the individual can not can not complete a sexual act without this object present.
- The application of behavioral theory to change a specific behavior.
- A modern adaptation of psychoanalytic therapy which has made sometimes minor and sometimes major changes to Freud's original theories.
- The therapeutic technique based on humanistic theory which is non-directive and empathic.
- The physical act resulting from an obsession. Typically a compulsive act is done in an attempt to alleviate the discomfort created by an obsession.
- A behavioral technique used to treat phobias in which the client is presented with the feared stimulus until the associated anxiety disapears.
- A humanistic Psychologist who developed Client-Centered Therapy.
- Changes in thoughts, emotions, and behavior as a result of extended job stress and unrewarded repetition of duties. Burnout is seen as extreme dissatisfaction, pessimism, lowered job satisfaction, and a desire to quit.
Down
- Treatment focused on increasing awareness of one's self concept.
- Period of extreme anxiety and physical symptoms such as heart palpitations, shakiness, dizziness, and racing thoughts. Initial attacks are often reported to feel like a heart attack due to the heart palpitations. A medical exam should be conducted to rule out any such condition.
- A generic term for the idea that chemical in the brain are either too scarce or too abundant resulting in a mental disorder such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder.
- False perception of reality (e.g., hearing voices that aren't there or seeing people who do not exist) [auditory (hearing); visual (sight); olfactory (smell); tactile (touch); and taste]
- A separation from the self, with the most severe resulting in Dissociative Identity Disorder. Most of us experience this in very mild forms such as when we are driving long distance and lose time or find ourselves day dreaming longer than we thought.
- Treatment focusing on the awareness and understanding of one's feelings.
- A humanistic therapy based on Carl Roger's beliefs that an individual has an unlimited capacity for psychological growth and will continue to grow unless barriers are placed in the way.
- The behavioral technique of pairing a naturally occurring stimulus and response chain with a different stimulus in order to produce a response which is not naturally occurring.
- The psychoanalytic technique of allowing a patient to talk without direction or input in order to analyze current issues of the client.
- Treatment involving the combination of behaviorism (based on the theories of learning) and cognitive therapy (based on the theory that our cognitions or thoughts control a large portion of our behaviors).
- The application of behavioral theory (e.g. conditioning, reinforcement) in the treatment of mental illness.
- False belief system (e.g., believing you are Napoleon, have magical powers, or the false belief that others are 'out to get you.').
- An intense fear of a specific object or situation. Most of us consider ourselves to have phobias, but to be diagnosable, the fear must significantly restrict our way of life.
- is often referred to as the father of clinical psychology. His extensive theory of personality development (psychoanalytical theory) is the cornerstone for modern psychological thought, and consists of (1) the psychosexual stages of development, (2) the structural model of personality (id, ego, superego), and (3) levels of consciousness (conscious, subconscious, and unconscious). See Psychoanalysis.
32 Clues: A persistent and seemingly uncontrollable thought. • Treatment focused on increasing awareness of one's self concept. • A humanistic Psychologist who developed Client-Centered Therapy. • The application of behavioral theory to change a specific behavior. • Treatment focusing on the awareness and understanding of one's feelings. • ...
Lessons 4-6 2016-01-05
Across
- an interval of time within the ice age that is marked by colder temperature and glacier advances.
- study of the flow of matter primarily in the liquid state under conditions.
- study of ancient magnetic fields.
- largest layer of the earth.
- circulating current.
- outer solid part of the planet including earth's crust.
- can be found in the deepest region of the planet.
- This theory was proposed by Arthur Holmes in 1929.
- is regarded as the most important theory ever developed in the field of geology.
- study of the climatic conditions of past geologic ages.
- heat can be transferred from one place to another through a process.
Down
- period characterized by warmer climates within the ice age.
- He attributed the supercontinent breakup during the time of Noah.
- highly viscous layer which lies between the crust and the lower mantle.
- outermost layer of the earth.
15 Clues: circulating current. • largest layer of the earth. • outermost layer of the earth. • study of ancient magnetic fields. • can be found in the deepest region of the planet. • This theory was proposed by Arthur Holmes in 1929. • outer solid part of the planet including earth's crust. • study of the climatic conditions of past geologic ages. • ...
Vocabulary 9 2012-11-04
20 Clues: plan • attention • character • protected • community • real life • first time • being seen • allegiance • make smaller • indifference • continued use • special skill • decision maker • firm conviction • electric current • free from danger • educational institution • representation of a person • contract to receive something
New Nation 2013-09-03
Across
- Each state keeps its independence
- Supporter of the Constitution
- Who wrote the Declaration of Independence?
- England had a Tyrannical leader!
- The major Compromise
- Articles of Confederation had one branch of Government
- Anti-Federalist argued Constitution could not protect _____rights
- Who wrote the papers supporting the Constitution?
Down
- Who killed Hamilton?
- Opposed Constitution
- Current Constitution has _____ branches of Government
- Shared Responsibility
- Stile means...
- Who drafted first 10 Amendments?
- Firm League of...
- Articles gave Congress right to declare war, but not...
- Articles allowed each state to make their own____used for commerce
17 Clues: Stile means... • Firm League of... • Who killed Hamilton? • Opposed Constitution • The major Compromise • Shared Responsibility • Supporter of the Constitution • Who drafted first 10 Amendments? • England had a Tyrannical leader! • Each state keeps its independence • Who wrote the Declaration of Independence? • Who wrote the papers supporting the Constitution? • ...
motivation 2025-07-09
9 Clues: two factor theory • human needs heirachy • theory x and theory y • the want to do something well • hertzberg focuses on improving__ • mcgreggor believes you should seek__ • relationships influence productivity` • improvement through scientific managment • front man of the best band itw(wunderhorse)
Unit 4-6 Review 2021-02-12
Across
- to make solid or firm
- inconsistent
- stern, merciless; fierce, savage, cruel
- greatest, highest, farthest
- polite
- the act of drawing back in this way
- to window-shop
- an imitation designed to deceive
- not imaginary
Down
- having no legal force or effect
- to deceive
- destroy completely
- joining together for a common goal
- one who flees or runs away
- malicious
- fundamental
- A stupid person
- active, energetic, forceful
- relating to farm areas
- to cause feelings of discouragement
20 Clues: polite • malicious • to deceive • fundamental • inconsistent • not imaginary • to window-shop • A stupid person • destroy completely • to make solid or firm • relating to farm areas • one who flees or runs away • greatest, highest, farthest • active, energetic, forceful • having no legal force or effect • an imitation designed to deceive • joining together for a common goal • ...
Tell Tale Heart Vocabulary 2025-10-17
Across
- do what I say and not as I do
- highly developed; keen
- become aware of something
- insane
- conceal one's true emotions
- useless
- different
- enough
- extremely unpleasant
- to keep secret
Down
- intense strong emotion
- devise a plan
- cut off a the limbs of an animal or person
- talk with one's hands
- a guess; uncertain
- a wood boring beetle
- a firm decision reached with authority
- to cover
- showing good judgement
- extremely tired
20 Clues: insane • enough • useless • to cover • different • devise a plan • to keep secret • extremely tired • a guess; uncertain • a wood boring beetle • extremely unpleasant • talk with one's hands • intense strong emotion • highly developed; keen • showing good judgement • become aware of something • conceal one's true emotions • do what I say and not as I do • a firm decision reached with authority • ...
History of the Atom 2023-10-05
Across
- the name of the model that shows an atom with mostly empty space where the positive and negative are scattered?
- the number of Postulates that Dalton had
- neutral part of the atom
- who was the first person to say the "two elements cannot be destroyed"
- a type of radiation that comes from a radiation source
- used in experiments by JJ Thomson
- Democritus theory said that this is made of small pointy atoms
- the positive center of Rutherford atom
- the charge of beta rays
- negative particle that is part of the atom
- One of Demcritus theories on the atom (starts with ind....)
Down
- Democritus theory said that this is made of large round atoms
- who proposed that atoms are the basic building blocks of matter
- a scientist from New Zealand who helped to disprove the plum pudding of the atom
- propose that electrons ae found orbits or energy levels
- the Greek word that means indivisible
- who said that the atom is composed of two elements
- a French physicist who is credited with discovering radiation with Marie and Pierre Curie
- Rutherford's experiment if called
- what is the Shape of Democitus model of the atom
- positive particle that is part of the atom
21 Clues: the charge of beta rays • neutral part of the atom • Rutherford's experiment if called • used in experiments by JJ Thomson • the Greek word that means indivisible • the positive center of Rutherford atom • the number of Postulates that Dalton had • positive particle that is part of the atom • negative particle that is part of the atom • ...
Evolution 2023-05-16
Across
- when one end of the graph has higher phenotype frequencies than the ones in the middle
- theory that explains how random changes in genetic material and competition for scarce resources cause species to change gradually
- Charles____created the theory of evolution that is backed by natural selection
- formation of new and distinct species that occurs during evolution
- The one who comes down from a common ancestor
- passed down characteristic that increases an organisms chance at survival
- Ancestral species from which later species evolved
- has no useful function in an organism but shows a link to a common ancestor
- situation where allele frequencies in a population will not evolve
- inheritable differences are due to__
- mutations do not always affect an organism____
- the remains of a plant or animal that existed a long time ago
- Natural selection on single-gene traits can lead to changes in____ frequencies
- the geographical distribution of species
Down
- The animal Charles Darwin studied
- ____would indicate an organism's ability to survive and reproduce in their environment
- when individuals are better suited to their environment and survive and reproduce most successfully
- this term describes how organisms best suited for their environment are most successful at surviving and reproducing
- type of genetic drift that follows the colonization of a new habitat by a small group of individuals is____
- group of organisms of the same species populating a specific area
- when the curve of the graph has higher phenotype frequencies in the middle compared to either ends
- A variety of traits and alleles in a population
- artificial selection practiced by farmers is called____
- body parts that are similar in related species; show that they were inherited from a common ancestor
- type of graph that favors extreme traits over intermediate
- well-tested explanation that brings together a broad spectrum of obervations
26 Clues: The animal Charles Darwin studied • inheritable differences are due to__ • the geographical distribution of species • The one who comes down from a common ancestor • mutations do not always affect an organism____ • A variety of traits and alleles in a population • Ancestral species from which later species evolved • ...
NURSEWORD PUZZLE 2024-12-11
Across
- When a group needs to change but is stuck in old habits, what is the process called that helps them let go and move forward?
- What is the cornerstone of nursing practice and serves as its "backbone"?
- _______ dignity refers to the inherent worth granted to all humans by creation.
- During which stage of childhood do kids learn to follow authority and cooperate with others?
- Who is considered the pioneer of nursing theory development?
- Who is known as the father of social psychology and coined the term "group dynamics"?
- In Leininger’s theory, knowledge gained from direct experience is referred to as what?
- What principle of conservation emphasizes balancing energy input and output to avoid fatigue?
- What is the basic level of human needs that includes things like food, water, and shelter, which must be met for survival?
- The _____ Era (1950s–1970s) emphasized the role of research as a driving force to build a specialized body of nursing knowledge.
Down
- What stage of life starts at birth and focuses on things like learning to coordinate movements and understanding caregivers as comforting or frustrating?
- At what stage does a child follow rules mainly because of what authority figures, like parents or teachers, say, without fully understanding right from wrong?
- Which virtue reflects staying true to yourself during the teenage years, when you’re figuring out who you are?
- What is the primary goal of Levine's Conservation Model?
- It is the struggle between good and evil
- What do we call the state where forces are balanced and nothing changes?
- What type of environment in Levine’s model involves language, culture, and beliefs?
- In young adulthood, what do people need to form to feel connected and avoid loneliness?
- What type of environment in Levine’s model includes elements like pollution and radiation?
- _______ is a form of unconditional love that unites eros and agape in Katie Eriksson’s theory.
20 Clues: It is the struggle between good and evil • What is the primary goal of Levine's Conservation Model? • Who is considered the pioneer of nursing theory development? • What do we call the state where forces are balanced and nothing changes? • What is the cornerstone of nursing practice and serves as its "backbone"? • ...
Theory 2026-02-28
Across
- Book of first entry
- An item with long term value
- When money is owed to another person it is called ____
- Assets - ______ = Net worth
- When expenses are less than the income
Down
- Which concept is applied when items are highlighted to be seen separately by the reader.
- _____have a negative effect on a person's net worth
- When the owner gives money to the business we call it ____
- Proof of payment
- Proof of an online payment
10 Clues: Proof of payment • Book of first entry • Proof of an online payment • Assets - ______ = Net worth • An item with long term value • When expenses are less than the income • _____have a negative effect on a person's net worth • When money is owed to another person it is called ____ • When the owner gives money to the business we call it ____ • ...
Liam H #7 11/7/25 2025-11-07
14 Clues: hard • plant • three • an injury • with no mistakes • giant sea mammals • spinning in circles • 4th day of the week • what a student does • pretty rock from clam • takes care of patients • what you write on paper • giving something to somebody • what you can do with a rubber band
FCE - Crossword 2025-11-24
Across
- Process ensuring related account balances
- Illegal process of disguising the origins of criminal funds
- State of a record before becoming documentary
- What does internal audit function rely upon to gain assurance over financial controls?
- In the Audit Firm Governance Code, which concept represents the shared principles that support integrity, objectivity, and public interest responsibilities within the audit firm?
- Document that reduces misunderstanding and sets out audit terms
- An audit that evaluates how effective an organisation’s purchasing operations are.
- Which audit stage involves documenting internal controls?
Down
- In a three-party audit relationship, the auditor is known as the ________.
- What do we call the mechanisms implemented by management to prevent financial errors, misstatements, and irregularities?
- Which department provides independent assurance to the board that risk management, governance, and control processes are operating effectively?
- In order to have independent internal audit or lessen the cost of employment and so on, company could take what action for its internal audit function
- Approach used by auditors to prioritise significant risks
- For a company to be exempt from statutory audit in the UK, one of the qualifying conditions is that its annual ________ must be below £10.2m.
- External audits face five inherent limitations often remembered using the acronym ________.
- Internal control that separates responsibilities to reduce fraud risk
16 Clues: Process ensuring related account balances • State of a record before becoming documentary • Approach used by auditors to prioritise significant risks • Which audit stage involves documenting internal controls? • Illegal process of disguising the origins of criminal funds • Document that reduces misunderstanding and sets out audit terms • ...
Cell: Fundamental Unit of Life 2022-07-19
Across
- The single exception to the cell theory
- The basic structural and functional unit of an organism.
- the gas that can freely pass through the cell membrane and is required in aerobic respiration
- It is the site for all the biochemical reactions that take place in a cell
- Scientist who discovered protoplasm
- Who modified the cell theory given by Schleiden and Schwann
- Form of cellular transport that occurs against the concentration gradient
- Instrument used to view cells
- Hereditary unit that is transferred from parent to offspring
- Control Centre of the cell
- Movement of water molecules from a region of their high concentration to low concentration.
Down
- Organisms which do not have a defined nucleus
- Rigid outer covering in plant cells which protect them from mechanical injury.
- Movement of water molecules out of a cell when it is placed in a hypertonic solution
- Spherical body found within a nucleus
- a slipper shaped protozoa
- Structures present within a cell
- the first type of cells discovered by Robert Hooke
- A cell's size and shape depends upon it's:
- The cell wall in fungi is composed of this sugar.
20 Clues: a slipper shaped protozoa • Control Centre of the cell • Instrument used to view cells • Structures present within a cell • Scientist who discovered protoplasm • Spherical body found within a nucleus • The single exception to the cell theory • A cell's size and shape depends upon it's: • Organisms which do not have a defined nucleus • ...
Chapter 9 2025-10-20
Across
- Selling products at unfairly low prices.
- The practice of moving a business process that was done domestically at the local factory to a foreign country.
- Relativism The concept that morality varies from one culture to another and that business practices are differentially defined as right or wrong by particular cultures.
- Controls Government restrictions on the amount of a particular currency that can be bought or sold.
- Area Structure A global organizational structure well suited to firms with a low degree of diversification, often based on firms’ geographical areas.
- A limit on the amount of goods an importing country will accept for certain product categories in a specific period of time.
- Globals" Firms founded with the knowledge and resources to accelerate their participation and investment in the global marketplace.
- Outsourcing Contracting with an organization to perform a business function in a country other than the one where the product or service will be sold.
- An alternative to direct investment that requires a licensee to pay commissions or royalties on sales or supplies used in manufacturing.
- Manufacturing The practice of hiring a foreign firm to produce a designated volume of the domestic firm’s product.
- Division Structure A global organizational structure for diversified multinational enterprises where each unit is a self-contained entity.
- The purchase of products from a foreign source.
- An alliance that promotes the free circulation of goods, services, and production factors among member nations in South America.
- Trade Organization (WTO) An entity that promotes free trade among member nations by eliminating trade barriers.
- Company A company that links buyers and sellers in different countries.
- of Trade The difference in value between a nation's exports and its imports.
- (Gross Domestic Product) The market value of a nation's total output of goods and services for a given period.
- Alliance Partnerships that are formed to create a competitive advantage on a worldwide basis.
- Enterprise A firm that has operations or subsidiaries in many countries.
Down
- (Association of Southeast Asian Nations): An alliance that promotes trade and economic integration among member nations in Southeast Asia.
- Division A centralized responsibility for international operations and activities, often organized on the basis of geography.
- Marketing Developing and performing marketing activities across national boundaries.
- Union (EU) An alliance that promotes trade among its member countries in Europe.
- The development of marketing strategies that treat the entire world as a single entity.
- Matrix Structure A global organizational structure designed to achieve both global integration and local responsiveness.
- Ownership A situation in which a company owns subsidiaries or other facilities overseas.
- Venture A partnership between a domestic firm and a foreign firm or government.
- The practice of contracting noncore operations with an organization that specializes in that operation.
- (Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership): A free trade agreement between 15 nations in the Asia-Pacific.
- A form of licensing where a franchiser grants a franchisee the right to market its product, using its trademark, business format, and procedure.
- The sale of products to foreign markets.
- (United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement): An alliance that merges Canada, Mexico, and the United States into a single market.
- A government's suspension of trade in a particular product or with a given country.
- Tariff A duty levied by a nation on goods bought outside its borders and brought into the country.
- Department A firm's structural subunit of the marketing department or separate department to handle international operations.
- (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation): An alliance that facilitates open trade and economic and technical cooperation among member nations throughout the world.
36 Clues: Selling products at unfairly low prices. • The sale of products to foreign markets. • The purchase of products from a foreign source. • Company A company that links buyers and sellers in different countries. • Enterprise A firm that has operations or subsidiaries in many countries. • of Trade The difference in value between a nation's exports and its imports. • ...
Chapter 5 Call of the Wild 2023-09-12
Across
- walking, strolling
- miserable, shameful, despicable
- disappointment, sadness
- stated, claimed, affirmed
- pestered, harassed, annoyed
- careless, sloppy
- mumbling, speechless, incoherent
- sad, lonely, dejected
- to hold back or hush up
Down
- to falter, stumble, or teeter
- sloppy, messy, untidy
- statement of opposition
- closely tied to the family
- artificial, pretended, insincere
- interbred animals
- extra, surplus, unnecessary
- traditional, standard
- tight, stiff, firm
- decreased, reduced, diminished
- cracks, crevices, or gaps
20 Clues: careless, sloppy • interbred animals • walking, strolling • tight, stiff, firm • sloppy, messy, untidy • traditional, standard • sad, lonely, dejected • statement of opposition • disappointment, sadness • to hold back or hush up • stated, claimed, affirmed • cracks, crevices, or gaps • closely tied to the family • extra, surplus, unnecessary • pestered, harassed, annoyed • ...
Econ wordpuzzle -Robert Ashbrook 2025-10-03
Across
- Government imposed limits on how much people can charge for a product
- the currency one earns from working a job
- The skills and knowledge of laborers
- Significant decline in economic activity
- the interest rate used to calculate the present value of future cash flows, reflecting the time value of money and the risk of investment
- the chance for things to change rapidly and unpredictably
- the author who wrote "The wealth of nations"
- Theory that the market is totally led by individuals
- All taxable income and wages you get from working for someone else yourself or from a business or farm you own
- Theory that the government should avoid running an economy
Down
- federal government buying bonds
- the effort of trying to get factory jobs back for American workers
- Primary way to know the nations health,wealth, and growth
- Inputs used to make goods
- All existing non man made resources
- trading one good for another
- fundamental problem of resources being limited
- Econmic system based on the free market idea and mercantilism
- Deciding whether to increase/decrease by small amounts
- value of goods quoted in prices
20 Clues: Inputs used to make goods • trading one good for another • federal government buying bonds • value of goods quoted in prices • All existing non man made resources • The skills and knowledge of laborers • Significant decline in economic activity • the currency one earns from working a job • the author who wrote "The wealth of nations" • ...
GED Vocabulary Part 2 2025-10-02
Across
- characterized by extreme care and great effort
- a natural inclination
- having rugged physical strength
- unrestrained by convention or morality
- a natural inclination
- a soft wet area of low-lying land that sinks underfoot
- an overwhelming defeat
- the act of gratifying a desire
- extremely steep
- the act of appealing for help
- a standard or typical example
Down
- a journey taken for pleasure
- the profession of a teacher
- of or associated with the great masses of people
- impossible to prevent, resist, or stop
- confidently optimistic and cheerful
- suggesting the horror of death and decay
- firm in purpose or belief
- putting an end to all debate or action
- keenly distressing to the mind or feelings
20 Clues: extremely steep • a natural inclination • a natural inclination • an overwhelming defeat • firm in purpose or belief • the profession of a teacher • a journey taken for pleasure • the act of appealing for help • a standard or typical example • the act of gratifying a desire • having rugged physical strength • confidently optimistic and cheerful • ...
Chapter 13 - Intro 2024-11-12
Across
- theory that we act to reduce the discomfort we feel when two of our cognitions are inconsistent
- feelings that predispose us to respond in a particular way to others
- goals shared that override differences among people & require their cooperation
- perceived incompatibility of actions, goals or ideas
- theory that explains someone's behavior by crediting the situation or the person's disposition
- set of norms about social position
- unselfish regard for the welfare of others
- generalized belief about a group of people
- people are influenced by attention-getting cues
- theory that prejudice offers an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame
- phenomenon that reflects "good is rewarded & evil is punished"
- the tendency for people who have fist agreed to a small request later comply with a larger one
- any physical or verbal behavior intended to harm someone
- thinking that occurs when the desire for harmony overrides realistic appraisal of alternatives
Down
- culturally modeled guide for how to act in various situations
- occurs when group participation makes people both aroused & anonymous
- strategy designed to decrease international tensions (abbr.)
- unjustifiable negative behavior toward a group of people
- researcher that discussed conformity in his standard and comparison lines experiment (last name)
- unjustifiable & negative attitude toward a group & its members
- understood rules for accepted & expected behavior
- study of how we think, influence and relate to one another
- condition in which people received from a relationship in proportion to what they give
- "them"
- "us"
- when people in a group exert less effort then they would if individually accountable
- experiencing strengthened performance in others' presence
- occurs when interested people's thinking is influenced by evidence & arguments
- the two common subtle types are suggestibility & mimicry
29 Clues: "us" • "them" • set of norms about social position • unselfish regard for the welfare of others • generalized belief about a group of people • people are influenced by attention-getting cues • understood rules for accepted & expected behavior • perceived incompatibility of actions, goals or ideas • unjustifiable negative behavior toward a group of people • ...
Industrial Revolution - Period 6 - Isabella Singh 2025-05-12
Across
- Economic theory advocating for collective ownership
- Process of fencing off land for commercial farming
- Man-made waterways for transport before railroads
- Group formed to protect workers' rights
- Middle-class owners of production in Marxist theory
- First major industry to industrialize
- Industrial-era laborers without ownership of production
- Economic system based on private ownership and profit
- Invented by James Watt to power machinery and transport
- Making large quantities of identical goods quickly
Down
- Identical components for efficient manufacturing
- Place where goods are mass-produced
- Use of young workers in dangerous factory jobs
- Production method used by Henry Ford
- Machine that increased threat production
- Growth of cities due to industrial jobs
- Group that opposed industrial machines
- English city that boomed during the Industrial Revolution
- Revolutionized transportation and trade
- Primary energy source of early factories
20 Clues: Place where goods are mass-produced • Production method used by Henry Ford • First major industry to industrialize • Group that opposed industrial machines • Growth of cities due to industrial jobs • Group formed to protect workers' rights • Revolutionized transportation and trade • Machine that increased threat production • Primary energy source of early factories • ...
Celebrate Value Day! 2023-01-10
Across
- A sweet-smelling gift.
- Cupid's weapon of choice.
- A bond of mutual fondness.
- A fragrant mist used to smell nice.
- Not meant to be known or seen by others.
- A domesticated animal kept at home.
- A stuffed bear.
- A deep affection.
- Capturing interest as if by a spell.
- A firm belief in another's reliability.
Down
- The shortest month of the year.
- _______ over quantity.
- A white bird of the same family as pigeons.
- Another word for "sweets".
- To recognize the worth of.
- People blood-related to you.
- The main organ of the cardiovascular system.
- A meal often eaten in the evenings after lunch.
- An embrace.
19 Clues: An embrace. • A stuffed bear. • A deep affection. • _______ over quantity. • A sweet-smelling gift. • Cupid's weapon of choice. • Another word for "sweets". • To recognize the worth of. • A bond of mutual fondness. • People blood-related to you. • The shortest month of the year. • A fragrant mist used to smell nice. • A domesticated animal kept at home. • ...
Corporate Social Responsibility 2014-04-02
Across
- A total consists of two components: basic tariff and fuel clause charge
- The office of the Privacy Commissioner of Personal Data concluded that the Octopus company violated three _ _ _
- Major shareholder in MTR
- Company we have chosen for analysis of tariff adjustment
- An option that government plans to purchase from the mainland power grid
- A theory introduced by John Elkington in 1997
Down
- When 3Ps balance, __________can be achieved
- Our topic
- Technology used by Octopus card
- A group of people who was concerned by company in traditional view
- One of the 3Ps, consisting of government, suppliers and customers
- A guidance applied in HK gives an insight on how businesses and organizations can operate in a socially responsible way
- A business wants to maximize _________ in the traditional view
- One of the 3Ps, consisting of NGOs
- An issue related to Octopus card
- A person who introduced stakeholder theory
16 Clues: Our topic • Major shareholder in MTR • Technology used by Octopus card • An issue related to Octopus card • One of the 3Ps, consisting of NGOs • A person who introduced stakeholder theory • When 3Ps balance, __________can be achieved • A theory introduced by John Elkington in 1997 • Company we have chosen for analysis of tariff adjustment • ...
U4 vocabulary Crossword 2022-01-13
Across
- quick to detect or respond to slight changes, signals, or influences.
- careful not to inconvenience or harm others.
- a person who has no one to dance with or who feels shy, awkward, or excluded at a party.
- of, denoting, or typical of an introvert.
- giving or showing firm and constant support or allegiance to a person or institution.
- having or showing a modest or low estimate of one's importance.
- not firm or fixed; liable to give way or break.
- able to act or be done as one wishes; not under the control of another
- have or include (something) as a necessary or integral part or result.
- help (someone), typically by doing a share of the work
Down
- create or design (something that has not existed before); be the originator of.
- showing or involving great activity or vitality.
- (of a person or animal) able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.
- noticeably happy and optimistic.
- (of a person) given to unpredictable changes of mood, especially sudden bouts of gloominess or sullenness.
- having or showing a lack of skill and sensitivity in dealing with others or with difficult issues.
- producing or capable of producing much noise.
- (of a person, action, or motive) lacking consideration for other people; concerned chiefly with one's own personal profit or pleasure.
- bring together or into contact so that a real or notional link is established.
- not able to be relied on as honest or truthful.
20 Clues: noticeably happy and optimistic. • of, denoting, or typical of an introvert. • careful not to inconvenience or harm others. • producing or capable of producing much noise. • not firm or fixed; liable to give way or break. • not able to be relied on as honest or truthful. • showing or involving great activity or vitality. • ...
4/26/21 2021-04-27
Across
- Having a solid surface.
- Known for sure.
- The feeling of needing something to drink.
- To go back to a place or person.
- To control the movement of a vehicle.
- To perform a duty for.
- Optimism or a shout of encouragement.
- A large game bird native to North America.
- The organ of hearing.
Down
- As good as something can possibly be.
- The back part of something.
- To be afraid of something.
- A large group of animals.
- A word or phrase describing a concept.
- A human being.
- A clear liquid secreted from the eye.
- Close by.
- To break suddenly.
- The time it takes for the Earth to revolve around the sun.
- Easy to see or understand.
20 Clues: Close by. • A human being. • Known for sure. • To break suddenly. • The organ of hearing. • To perform a duty for. • Having a solid surface. • A large group of animals. • To be afraid of something. • Easy to see or understand. • The back part of something. • To go back to a place or person. • As good as something can possibly be. • A clear liquid secreted from the eye. • ...
Dental Caries 2016-12-28
Across
- Proposed Proteolytic Theory.
- No of zones in dentinal caries.
- Acid formed by enzymatic breakdown of sugar and acid.
- Consistency of necrotic mass of dentin.
- Decrease in plaque formation.
- Dentin in arrested caries.
- Secondary invaders in carious lesion.
- The glycoprotein derived from saliva and adsorbed on the tooth surface.
- DEJ facilitates this mode of spread of caries.
- Widely accepted theory of dental caries.
- Alternative term for primary caries.
- Prominent structure in body of lesion.
- Sudden rapid and almost uncontrollable destruction of teeth by caries.
Down
- Carbohydrate mostly involved in etiology of dental caries.
- Most potent chemical anticaries agent
- Facilitate attachment of Actinomyces to tooth surface.
- Gram-negative Cocci in plaque with proposed anticariogenic property.
- Dentin appearing white in transmitted light
- Substance lost in earliest stage of carious lesion.
- Substance altering the tooth surface and structure
- Indicator used in Snyder test
- pH at which saliva ceases to be saturated with calcium and phosphate.
- Caries occurring in the immediate vicinity of restoration
- Organisms involved in smooth surface caries.
24 Clues: Dentin in arrested caries. • Proposed Proteolytic Theory. • Indicator used in Snyder test • Decrease in plaque formation. • No of zones in dentinal caries. • Alternative term for primary caries. • Most potent chemical anticaries agent • Secondary invaders in carious lesion. • Prominent structure in body of lesion. • Consistency of necrotic mass of dentin. • ...
Production 2023-11-23
Across
- At this level the country produces enough goods and services to meet the citizens needs.
- both cottage industries and small businesses provide this. Primary - this industry in extracting natural resources from earth in order to make goods.
- is an industry where raw materials go through manufacturing process where value is added and transformed into a new products.
- refers to the physical and mental effort used in the production of goods and services.
- is a industry where production is produced at home.
- is the people who most provide labor in cottage industries. Mechanization- is the use of machines to replace some of the human or animal effort
- a cottage industry requires a small amount of this.
- refers to least wastage of factors of production.
Down
- At this level the country is barely able to produce enough to meet the need of its citizens.
- A type of linkage where an industry depends on the output from a previous sector.
- A type of linkage where the output of one industry becomes input in another.
- The country produces more than enough goods and services to meet its domestic needs and the extra is exported to the other countries.
- is when a firm supplies do another industry or firm.
- One country produces goods solely for the export market
- this industry is heavily dependent on human input.
- the term for when one industry is connected to another by supplying or using its product.
- another word for the industry is primary production.
- All those gift of nature which are available to us for production.
18 Clues: refers to least wastage of factors of production. • this industry is heavily dependent on human input. • is a industry where production is produced at home. • a cottage industry requires a small amount of this. • is when a firm supplies do another industry or firm. • another word for the industry is primary production. • ...
Theatre History 2021-10-04
Across
- People create ______ out of a desire to explain the world around them.
- The “god in the machine”
- is the theory that theatre may originate from games and the playful instinct of human kind.
- Plays without a script
- The area where the audience sits
- play
- is the theory that humans have an inbuilt desire to imitate, to act, and to pretend and that's how we learn.
Down
- Plays that aren't written to be performed.
- a place in which a play is performed.
- The side entrance and exit spaces
- The space actors change inside/ also the back wall of the stage
- Alter at the center of the greek stage
- How many playwrights were allowed per competition.
- ways of mediating between the human and supernatural.
14 Clues: play • Plays without a script • The “god in the machine” • The area where the audience sits • The side entrance and exit spaces • a place in which a play is performed. • Alter at the center of the greek stage • Plays that aren't written to be performed. • How many playwrights were allowed per competition. • ways of mediating between the human and supernatural. • ...
CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY (VIRENDRA RAJPUT-205) 2021-04-16
Across
- __had given the theory Doctrine of evolution.
- Who tried to put evolution at centre of his world view?
- The temper of romantics is best studied in__
- Revolt of solitary instincts against social bonds is the key to the___.
- ___used the notion of falsification or refutability to characterize scientific hypotheses.
- Paul dessen was a __philosopher.
- Henri bergson attracted to___.
- __created structure of prepositions.
- What is evident in the four main forms?
- __positivism step is grouped by M.Schlick.
- Engles was the partner of__.
- __had given the system positivism.
- Karl Jasper's interpretins the signs of __in world around us.
- Bergson had interesting things to say about___.
Down
- The German romantics admire.
- In which subunit of theological stage of human development God was more personalized?
- ___was the pioneered of non classical philosophy of western Europe.
- Sociocentrism can be represented by___.
- __became the most vigorous of Revolutionary principles.
- Classical philosophy insisted on the ontological character of __
- ___given the idea of Transcendent.
- __Positivism step is Logical positivism.
- The type of man encouraged by romanticism especially of the _________ variety.
- Whilhelm dilthey distinguished__from physical science.
- Darwin's theory had ____ parts.
- What was the most famous book of engles?
- Ludwig Wittgenstein came from a well known__family.
- __had given the main idea of eternal return or recurrence.
- __was the 1st person to incorporate Eastern philosophy.
- ___had opposed on the existence of god.
30 Clues: The German romantics admire. • Engles was the partner of__. • Henri bergson attracted to___. • Darwin's theory had ____ parts. • Paul dessen was a __philosopher. • ___given the idea of Transcendent. • __had given the system positivism. • __created structure of prepositions. • Sociocentrism can be represented by___. • ___had opposed on the existence of god. • ...
Atomic Theory 2021-11-30
Across
- A unit of calculation that describes the sum of the mass of a substance per mole.
- A stable subatomic particle occurring in all atomic nuclei, with a positive electric charge.
- The total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus.
- A standard scientific unit for measuring large quantities of very small entities such as atoms, molecules, or other specified particles.
- The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom, which determines the chemical properties of an element and its place in the periodic table.
- The positively charged central core of an atom, consisting of protons and neutrons and containing nearly all its mass.
- A stable subatomic particle with a charge of negative electricity, found in all atoms and acting as the primary carrier of electricity in solids.
- Two or more forms of the same element that contain equal numbers of protons but different numbers of neutrons in their nuclei.
- A particle representing a quantum of light or other electromagnetic radiation.
Down
- A Greek word that means unable to be cut or divide.
- Unified atomic mass unit , another name for atomic mass unit.
- A negatively charged particle, located in the outermost shell of an atom.
- A location where an electron is likely to be found in an atom.
- An unstable form of a chemical element that releases radiation as it breaks down and becomes more stable.
- The positive charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube.
- A subatomic particle of about the same mass as a proton but without an electric charge.
- The negative charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube.
17 Clues: A Greek word that means unable to be cut or divide. • The total number of protons and neutrons in a nucleus. • Unified atomic mass unit , another name for atomic mass unit. • The positive charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube. • The negative charged metal plate at the end of a vacuum tube. • A location where an electron is likely to be found in an atom. • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- is primarily influenced by heredity
- It is a critical period in setting the pattern for personal and emotional adjustments.
- are modified by interactions with family, experiences at school, and acculturation.
- refers to the process of biological maturation inheritance and maturation.
- is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process.
- implies personality traits present during infancy
- adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical health,strengthh and energy.
- view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes
Down
- this stage of development has some predictable physical milestone
- has identified critical developmental tasks
- is a process that creates growth, progress, and positive change.
- refers to the impact of the environment, which involves the process of learning through experiences
- is transformed into a walking,talking toddler within a relatively short period of time.
- adulthood is the period of decline where the person thinks that he has done what he wanted to do and most of his life span is over.
- can be defined as the period that extends from conception to death.
- period that ranges from conception to birth.
- adulthood period people experience stress due to the double responsibility of caring for the aged parents and the growing children.
17 Clues: is primarily influenced by heredity • has identified critical developmental tasks • period that ranges from conception to birth. • implies personality traits present during infancy • is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process. • view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes • ...
Havighurst Theory 2021-11-18
Across
- is primarily influenced by heredity
- It is a critical period in setting the pattern for personal and emotional adjustments.
- are modified by interactions with family, experiences at school, and acculturation.
- refers to the process of biological maturation inheritance and maturation.
- is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process.
- implies personality traits present during infancy
- adulthood period adults are at the peak of physical health,strengthh and energy.
- view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes
Down
- this stage of development has some predictable physical milestone
- has identified critical developmental tasks
- is a process that creates growth, progress, and positive change.
- refers to the impact of the environment, which involves the process of learning through experiences
- is transformed into a walking,talking toddler within a relatively short period of time.
- adulthood is the period of decline where the person thinks that he has done what he wanted to do and most of his life span is over.
- can be defined as the period that extends from conception to death.
- period that ranges from conception to birth.
- adulthood period people experience stress due to the double responsibility of caring for the aged parents and the growing children.
17 Clues: is primarily influenced by heredity • has identified critical developmental tasks • period that ranges from conception to birth. • implies personality traits present during infancy • is typically viewed as a continual and cumulative process. • view sees development as more abrupt-a succession of changes • ...
Cell Theory 2021-09-24
Across
- Cells are the basic building blocks of ___.
- Organisms made of many cells.
- This scientist studied animals and identified that all animals are made of cells.
- Scientist who first discovered and named the cell.
- Scientist who observed living cells under the microscope.
- Organisms made of one cell.
Down
- This scientist studied plants and identified that all plants are made of cells.
- Science tool that made it possible to discovery cells.
- Scientist who stated that all cells come from pre-existing cells.
- Type of cell that Schleiden studied.
- The building block of all living things.
- All living things are made of ___ or more cells.
- All cells come from ___ cells.
- Inferred explanations in science, strongly supported by evidence.
- Robert Hooke viewed this under a microscope and first identified cells.
- Type of cell that Schwann studied.
- A unicellular organism Anton van Leeuwenhoek observed.
17 Clues: Organisms made of one cell. • Organisms made of many cells. • All cells come from ___ cells. • Type of cell that Schwann studied. • Type of cell that Schleiden studied. • The building block of all living things. • Cells are the basic building blocks of ___. • All living things are made of ___ or more cells. • Scientist who first discovered and named the cell. • ...
Atomic Theory 2021-08-25
Across
- Subatomic particle with neutral charge
- a mathmatical expression to find wave functio
- means atom in greek
- atom or molecule that gained or lost electron
- Who descredited Leucippus and democritus
- Subatomic particle with negative charge
- experiment to find charge and mass of electron
- the sum of protons and neutrons on perodic table
Down
- who discovered the electron
- the scientist who in invented the "Billiard Ball Mode"
- electrons at the out edge of the shell
- a chemical bond of two elements
- rejected the idea of only four elements
- chemist that discovered orbital model
- same element,different mass
- subatomic particle with positive charge
- substance that cannot be broken down into a smaller substance
17 Clues: means atom in greek • who discovered the electron • same element,different mass • a chemical bond of two elements • chemist that discovered orbital model • Subatomic particle with neutral charge • electrons at the out edge of the shell • rejected the idea of only four elements • subatomic particle with positive charge • Subatomic particle with negative charge • ...
Music Theory 2019-11-06
Across
- the highest instrument in the string orchestra
- slightly higher
- the lowest instrument in the string orchestra
- one beat of sound
- to play loudly
- two even sounds on one bear
- clef used for the cello and bass
- clef used for the viola
- two beats of silence
Down
- to play plucking the strings
- one beat of silence
- to play quietly
- five lines four spaces
- two beats of sound
- clef used for the violin
- slightly lower
- to play using the bow
17 Clues: to play loudly • slightly lower • slightly higher • to play quietly • one beat of sound • two beats of sound • one beat of silence • two beats of silence • to play using the bow • five lines four spaces • clef used for the viola • clef used for the violin • two even sounds on one bear • to play plucking the strings • clef used for the cello and bass • ...
Color Theory 2019-09-03
Across
- colors opposite each other on the color wheel
- blue and red mixed together
- adding lighter shades to draw attention to a feature
- adding darker shades to recede a feature
- the surface color of the skin
- adding black to a color changes this
- adding gray to a color creates this
- primary color
- red and yellow mixed together
Down
- the twelve pure cool and warm colors shown throughout the wheel
- the "underneath" color of the skin; warm, cool, or neutral
- an overall assessment of the skin
- groups of three colors next to each other on the color wheel
- any color with white added to it
- primary color
- fully reflects and scatters all visible wavelengths of light
- primary color
- the absence of or complete absorption of visible light
- yellow and blue mixed together
19 Clues: primary color • primary color • primary color • blue and red mixed together • the surface color of the skin • red and yellow mixed together • yellow and blue mixed together • any color with white added to it • an overall assessment of the skin • adding gray to a color creates this • adding black to a color changes this • adding darker shades to recede a feature • ...
Color Theory 2025-03-21
Across
- using 3 colors next to each other on the color wheel
- what you get when you mix white and red
- three colors that are evenly spaced on the color wheel
- an example of a secondary color
- an example of a tertiary color
- effects the brightness of a color
- all colors combined make this color
- the absence of color
- the category that contains red, blue and yellow
- the color you get when you mix blue and orange
- type of color you get by mixing complements
Down
- a way to arrange colors
- opposite colors on the color wheel
- how light or dark a color is
- literally means to use one color
- what you get when you mix a primary and secondary color
- the color that comes after green in the color spectrum (rainbow)
17 Clues: the absence of color • a way to arrange colors • how light or dark a color is • an example of a tertiary color • an example of a secondary color • literally means to use one color • effects the brightness of a color • opposite colors on the color wheel • all colors combined make this color • what you get when you mix white and red • type of color you get by mixing complements • ...
The Scientific Revolution 2024-05-11
Across
- Father of modern chemistry
- Stated "I think therefore I am" and developed analytical geometry
- Developed the first vaccine for smallpox using cowpox
- Published two books titled "Starry Messenger" and “Dialogue Concerning the Two Chief World Systems”
- Examined first red blood and bacteria cells
- Created the first microscope in 1590
Down
- Proved the basic principles of heliocentric theory correct
- Developed another measuring scale for the thermometer with a freezing point of 0
- First developed heliocentric theory
- Developed the first mercury barometer
- Developed the first thermometer with a freezing point of 32 degrees
- Dissected human corpses then published a book
- Created the Law of Universal Gravitation
- Left accurate data on the movements of the planets based on their position in the sky
14 Clues: Father of modern chemistry • First developed heliocentric theory • Created the first microscope in 1590 • Developed the first mercury barometer • Created the Law of Universal Gravitation • Examined first red blood and bacteria cells • Dissected human corpses then published a book • Developed the first vaccine for smallpox using cowpox • ...
Unit 4 Vocab Crossword (Frederick, Drummer Boy & Harriet) 2023-04-02
Across
- you coax or urge gently
- deeply serious
- doing something lawfully
- to fear or dread the future
- establish or implant gradually
- begin or start
- spread here and there or scattered
- the evidence or proof that someone's claim is correct
Down
- the public condemnation of something as wrong or evil
- off centered
- messy or untidy
- ability to speak powerfully and persuasively
- bring to mind
- keeps its full force without decreasing
- firm or determined
- the wise handling of practical matters
- remain or stay longer
- softened or muffled
18 Clues: off centered • bring to mind • deeply serious • begin or start • messy or untidy • firm or determined • softened or muffled • remain or stay longer • you coax or urge gently • doing something lawfully • to fear or dread the future • establish or implant gradually • spread here and there or scattered • the wise handling of practical matters • keeps its full force without decreasing • ...
SC 2024-05-31
Across
- food option that rarely seems worth the wait
- Brown vision enhancer
- from balding to curly
- unserious person with a serious name
- estival interns
- "like mike" legal professional
- what happens in gevas...
- famous ones include algernon and james
- I rarely recieve any
- big name at the firm
- winner of hearts, not livers
Down
- stallion of a venue
- the boy
- serving up creepy coffee
- "I've got PTSD"
- like the oracle but worse
- secretarial oracle with a fitting name
- tropical hallucinatory affliction
18 Clues: the boy • "I've got PTSD" • estival interns • stallion of a venue • I rarely recieve any • big name at the firm • Brown vision enhancer • from balding to curly • serving up creepy coffee • what happens in gevas... • like the oracle but worse • winner of hearts, not livers • "like mike" legal professional • tropical hallucinatory affliction • unserious person with a serious name • ...
Exam 2 for SPMD 3550 2024-10-01
Across
- What imagery function has the purpose of improving technical mechanics and details of performing a specific task? (two words, no spaces)
- This theory suggests that people who are the most autonomous, intrinsically motivated, and self-determined will be more likely to engage in a behavior. (three words, no spaces or punctuation)
- Imagery is creating or even ___________ an experience in your mind.
- This states that an anxiety management technique should be matched to a particular anxiety problem. (two words, no spaces)
- The foundation of the ____________ theory is that how we interpret arousal dictates the effect on performance.
- ___________________ this involves strategies such as making plans, managing time, problem solving, and goal setting. (three words, no spaces, no punctuation)
- _________ is a blend of physiological and psychological activity in a person that is not automatically pleasant or unpleasant.
- This type of anxiety relates to thoughts someone has like worry or apprehension: _________ anxiety.
- This states that the relationship between arousal and performance is direct and linear. (two words, no spaces)
- The 4 Cs model helps to outline characteristics of __________ __________ (two words, no spaces)
- Motivational General-____________ is an imagery function focused on regulating arousal, anxiety, and stress.
- What is the name of the third stage of a PST program?
- A __________ schedule of reinforcements should be used in the initial stages of learning.
- What is the ultimate goal of PST? (no spaces or punctuation)
- This terms means that someone has no motivation.
- The ___________ _________-__________ view implies that goal setting helps performance because when we set goals, we change psychological factors such as anxiety, confidence, or concentration. Those things are what directly influences performance, and goal setting helps improve those psychological factors. (three words, no spaces or punctuation)
- This is the most self-determined type of extrinsic motivation: _______ regulation.
- This theory states that the optimal level of state anxiety/arousal is not always at the midpoint; varies individual to individual: ___________ theory (five words, no spaces).
- You should use _____________ coping when you are in a situation that is not amenable to change. (two words, no spaces, no punctuation)
Down
- The __________ __________ view of goal setting explains that goal setting directly influences performance because it helps people perform harder and have better focus, persistence, and innovation with their strategies. (two words, no spaces)
- According to the Cognitive Evaluation Theory, if someone receives feedback that tells them ________ information about their competence, that feedback can help to increase their intrinsic motivation.
- ______ anxiety is the form of anxiety that can change from moment to moment in competition.
- Bad weather, time demands, coaching behaviors, and bad calls are examples of _______ stressors.
- This type of feedback focuses on providing information to the learner on what behaviors should be performed and how to do them effectively.
- When providing feedback, it is best to provide feedback related to knowledge of ___________.
- What is the final stage of self-regulation?
- What is the name of the stage of a PST program that is focsed on discussing specific strategies and techniques for learning psychological skills?
- This arousal regulation technique provides individuals with feedback on internal responses (e.g., heart rate, skin temperature) so they can gradually regulate these responses.
- True/False: Coaches cannot use psychological skills.
- The ________ _________ theory explains that similar neural mechanisms are used with actually executing a task and imaging that same task. (two words, no spaces)
- What somatic anxiety reduction strategy focuses on maximally contract one specific muscle group and then attempt to fully relax that same muscle group, all while focusing on the different sensations of tension and relaxation (three words, no spaces)
- PST stands for _________ ___________ _____________ (three words, no spaces)
- This type of goal is based on achieving standards according to ones own previous performance.
- How many stages are involved in the stages of stress/one’s stress response?
- “PST is only for problem athletes” is an example of a __________ about PST.
- A 5:1 ratio is recommended for using positive reinforcement and ____________. (one word)
- Imagery involves all of the senses including __________, kinesthetic, auditory, tactile, and olfactory.
- As we get more aroused, our attention _____________.
- ___________ training involves a series of exercises that produce sensations of warmth and heaviness.
- Fear of failure, self-doubt, and other thoughts about upcoming activities are examples of ________ stressors.
40 Clues: What is the final stage of self-regulation? • This terms means that someone has no motivation. • True/False: Coaches cannot use psychological skills. • As we get more aroused, our attention _____________. • What is the name of the third stage of a PST program? • What is the ultimate goal of PST? (no spaces or punctuation) • ...
10 point crossword puzzle 2023-10-24
Across
- one of the large landmasses of the earth
- a theory that the earth’s crust and upper mantle is divided into a number of large plate like sections that move.
- salt water that is split into north/south Atlantic, Indian and north/southern pacific
- a single thickness of some substance or material
- hot molten that erupts from volcanos
- making a solid into a liquid state
- name that Alfred Wegener gave to the supercontinent in his theory
- the movement of plates descending into the earth
- the bottom of a sea or ocean
- the action associated with volcanic activity
Down
- a big wave caused by a large sudden shift of tectonic plates underwater
- the top three layers of the earth
- who is the best dog? Hint:it’s mr pease dog
- molten rock in the earths crust
- the name of the bottom two layers of the earth
- the middle three layers of the earth
- caused by shifts underground of tectonic plates causing mass destruction to homes schools e.g
- first name of main person to question about Pangea
- a specialist in the history of earth recorded in rocks
- a name of a chain of many islands one of which is still developing and most have volcanoes
20 Clues: the bottom of a sea or ocean • molten rock in the earths crust • the top three layers of the earth • making a solid into a liquid state • the middle three layers of the earth • hot molten that erupts from volcanos • one of the large landmasses of the earth • who is the best dog? Hint:it’s mr pease dog • the action associated with volcanic activity • ...
Intervention Framework 2018-10-18
Across
- Reminding students of the rule if previous steps ineffective
- Describe the students innapropriate behaviour
- A way to distract the studentfrom their plan to disrupt the lesson is to invite them to provide assistance
- Command should be kept short, direct eye contact and firm voice
- Find a quiet and private place to talk to the student separately
- At this stage time out process has becomes more formailsed, and a contract can be in place for a students' behaviour
- Humor can lighten tense situations and help build warmth and rapport with their students
Down
- Restraint of some types are permitted only in violent situations occur and to protect students
- Eye contact, moving around the room and nod towards rule chart
- The teacher may need to follow up and follow through later by talking to a student individually
- Teachers may state assertively their personal feelings, the effect of student behaviour and a description of what they saw happen
- Making choices helps students to learn responsibility and become familiar with the consequences
- Serious repeated or dangerous behaviours may result in the students removal from the calssroom
- Students are directed to this area to settle down
- Keep repeating directions until the students learn to execute the behaviour
- Disregard attention seeking, whining, throwing tantrums and calling out
- Repeating simple directions, rule reminders and simple commands
- In a firm but not threatening tone ask the student what are you doing?
- Usually gives the student a choice before implemented
19 Clues: Describe the students innapropriate behaviour • Students are directed to this area to settle down • Usually gives the student a choice before implemented • Reminding students of the rule if previous steps ineffective • Eye contact, moving around the room and nod towards rule chart • Command should be kept short, direct eye contact and firm voice • ...
Poe Vocabulary Worksheet 2021-12-02
Across
- Charred part or pieces of a candle
- A birds's feathers collectively
- A dislike of human kind
- Deceptive in appearance
- Under the influence of drugs;drunk
- Publicly display
- Not standard
- Causing hatred or disgust
- In a firm or unwavering manner
- A false show or pretense
Down
- A flaming torch, one made out of thick wicks
- Having or showing keen mental judgement;shrewd
- Splendid in appearance
- Enthusiasm or Passion
- Full of good health, strength
- Lacking physical strength (opposite of vigor)
- A hollow spot on a surface
- Elaborate display of ceremony
- Fame or recognized superiority
- The wideness of something
20 Clues: Not standard • Publicly display • Enthusiasm or Passion • Splendid in appearance • A dislike of human kind • Deceptive in appearance • A false show or pretense • Causing hatred or disgust • The wideness of something • A hollow spot on a surface • Full of good health, strength • Elaborate display of ceremony • In a firm or unwavering manner • Fame or recognized superiority • ...
Conflict Management 2020-07-10
Across
- means to each other
- causation without fact
- measurable factors
- interest of all parties
- two negative conflict
- feeling threatened and reacting
- opposing goals
- maintained self image
- critical decision point
- decision as scenario unfolds
- how things should be
- look ahead
- creates series of meaning
- Being more involved
- plan to get even
- vague notion of expected outcome
- Inaccurate Perception
- underlying goods
- assessing cost in relationship
- Rational Dispute
- event that precipitates
- determined by environment
- Struggle among a small group
Down
- upcoming goals
- Tangible resources
- communication to move views
- negotiating and expanding the pie
- determined by biology
- struggle over interest and position
- perspective of speaker
- evade confrontation
- self image
- motives and behavior
- between two people
- wish list
- anticipating people's behavior
- feeling safe and engaging
- asking for a bad outcome
- People need each other
- demands or proposed solution
40 Clues: wish list • self image • look ahead • upcoming goals • opposing goals • plan to get even • underlying goods • Rational Dispute • Tangible resources • measurable factors • between two people • means to each other • evade confrontation • Being more involved • motives and behavior • how things should be • determined by biology • two negative conflict • maintained self image • Inaccurate Perception • ...
Plate Tectonics Chap. 5 2023-02-09
Across
- Caused when a plate goes under one another in the ocean.
- Hot rock above the ground.
- A boundary that slides past other boundaries.
- Occurs when a pan touches a stove, also known as the transfer of heat when one object touches another.
- Boundaries that are pushing towards other boundaries.
- Mountain formed by hot spots in the Earth.
- Occurs along divergent boundaries, and makes new oceanic crust.
- A theory that states the sea-floor is always moving.
Down
- Hot rock underground.
- When an oceanic plate slides under a continental plate.
- A boundary that is moving away from the other boundaries.
- Super continent made millions of years ago.
- A place filled with magma that rises to the Earth surface.
- The theory that states that there are plates in the crust that move everything around.
- The transfer of energy through space.
- Dead organisms preserved in rock.
- Chain of islands formed by a volcano.
- This can cause boiling water.
- Pieces of the earth's lithosphere which together make up the earth's surface.
- Found both on land and at the bottom of the ocean, where they are created by the process of seafloor spreading.
20 Clues: Hot rock underground. • Hot rock above the ground. • This can cause boiling water. • Dead organisms preserved in rock. • The transfer of energy through space. • Chain of islands formed by a volcano. • Mountain formed by hot spots in the Earth. • Super continent made millions of years ago. • A boundary that slides past other boundaries. • ...
Rocks With Schrock! 2025-09-19
Across
- Faults caused by tectonic plates breaking apart
- An area of volcanic activity that develops above where magma rises in a plume from the mantle
- When plates move away from each other
- The
- The process of plates merging and breaking apart over millions of years
- Theory that the lithosphere is broken into several large plates
- A semi-rigid part of the mantle that flows like syrup
- When plates slide across each other
Down
- The theory of continents moving over time
- Oceanic crust forms as magma rises and cools
- The center of the Earth is called
- A chain of mountains underwater caused by divergent plate movement
- the flow of air from the core of the Earth
- When plates move away from each other
14 Clues: The • The center of the Earth is called • When plates slide across each other • When plates move away from each other • When plates move away from each other • The theory of continents moving over time • the flow of air from the core of the Earth • Oceanic crust forms as magma rises and cools • Faults caused by tectonic plates breaking apart • ...
A level Physical Education 2022-03-10
Across
- Type of leadership that makes most of the decisions and uses commanding, directing style.
- Theory accounts for the fact that some people are not generally leaders but can show qualities in sporting situations.
- Part of Atkinson and Shiffren's memory model that can store 5-9 pieces of information.
- ___ Experiences, i.e modelling by others in Bandura's theory.
- Vealey's model that investigates the relationship between achievement motivation and self-confidence.
- ___ Accomplishments. These have the strongest influence on self confidence.
- Leadership style where the views of the group are considered.
Down
- Leader selected by external sources.
- Theory linked to motivation that gives reasons for winning and losing.
- Part of the memory model in which selective attention takes place
- Come from within the group because they are respected by other members.
11 Clues: Leader selected by external sources. • ___ Experiences, i.e modelling by others in Bandura's theory. • Leadership style where the views of the group are considered. • Part of the memory model in which selective attention takes place • Theory linked to motivation that gives reasons for winning and losing. • ...
Sensation & Perception 2025-10-15
Across
- The sensory system for taste.
- The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information.
- The central focal point in the retina, around which the eye's cones cluster.
- The process by which the eye's lens changes shape to focus near or far objects on the retina.
- The theory that color vision depends on three sets of opposing colors (red-green, blue-yellow, black-white).
- The amount of energy in a light or sound wave, which determines the brightness or loudness; related to amplitude.
- The minimum stimulus energy needed to detect a particular stimulus 50% of the time.
- The theory that we perceive depth by interpreting monocular cues (like light and shadow).
- Specialized neurons in the visual cortex that respond to specific features of the stimulus, such as shape, angle, or movement.
- The light-sensitive inner surface of the eye, containing the rods and cones.
- Visual receptors that detect black, white, and gray; necessary for peripheral and twilight vision.
- The minimum difference between two stimuli required for detection 50% of the time. Also called the just noticeable difference (JND).
- The sense of smell.
- Theory that predicts how and when we detect the presence of a faint stimulus (signal) amid background stimulation (noise).
Down
- Diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation.
- The ring of muscle tissue that forms the colored portion of the eye and regulates the size of the pupil.
- The basic taste sensations are sweet, sour, salty, bitter, and this one for savory/meaty.
- The distance from the peak of one light or sound wave to the peak of the next.
- Nerve that carries information from the retina to the brain.
- The area of the cerebral cortex that receives input from the eyes.
- Visual receptors sensitive to color and fine detail; function in daylight or well-lit conditions.
- The conversion of one form of energy into another, like sensory stimuli into neural impulses.
- The principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage (rather than a constant amount).
- The opening in the center of the eye through which light enters.
24 Clues: The sense of smell. • The sensory system for taste. • Nerve that carries information from the retina to the brain. • The process of organizing and interpreting sensory information. • Diminished sensitivity as a consequence of constant stimulation. • The opening in the center of the eye through which light enters. • ...
Natural Selection 2016-05-17
Across
- ________ of the fittest
- The environment
- How species have changed over time
- The existence of a human being or animal
- A flying animal
Down
- When a species dies out
- Invented the theory of Natural Selection
- group of islands which contain a large variety of animals
- mammals, marsupials, etc
- An idea that is used to explain an event
10 Clues: The environment • A flying animal • When a species dies out • ________ of the fittest • mammals, marsupials, etc • How species have changed over time • Invented the theory of Natural Selection • An idea that is used to explain an event • The existence of a human being or animal • group of islands which contain a large variety of animals
Spelling Word List 2 2022-10-23
Across
- telling a story
- originating naturally in a particular place
- the end of a story or the last part of something
- to take responsibility for someone else
- a promise enforced by the law
- your part or share of the whole
- lack of attention and care
- to get or gain
- the control center of the cell
Down
- seems likely to bring success
- to cause to leave
- to remember
- a beginning of a story or idea
- empty or free
- firm and determined
- to try to win or get something other people are trying to get
- happens once per year
- most simple form
18 Clues: to remember • empty or free • to get or gain • telling a story • most simple form • to cause to leave • firm and determined • happens once per year • lack of attention and care • seems likely to bring success • a promise enforced by the law • a beginning of a story or idea • the control center of the cell • your part or share of the whole • to take responsibility for someone else • ...
XI -Test -MOTHER'S DAY 2023-10-24
Across
- buck teeth and half- witted
- 'sixes and sevens' - refers to state of _
- second name of the playwright
- main protagonist
- doubtful, not very sure
- quality of mother, considerate
- attitude of Pearson family members
- locality on the outskirt of a city
- game of cards played by Pearson family
- another name for an idiot
Down
- it's that silly old bag from next door
- pompous nature
- colour of silk dress worn by daughter
- strong local beer
- profession of neighbour
- 'to put your foot down'
- astonished to see her mother smoking
- theme - _ of mother in the family
- interchange (of personalities)
- fond of iceshows and greyhound races
20 Clues: pompous nature • main protagonist • strong local beer • profession of neighbour • 'to put your foot down' • doubtful, not very sure • another name for an idiot • buck teeth and half- witted • second name of the playwright • quality of mother, considerate • interchange (of personalities) • theme - _ of mother in the family • attitude of Pearson family members • ...
Crossword 2013-09-10
Across
- We call them like that when they have an excessive desire to possess more than they need or deserve.
- To convince someone to do or think something.
- To bring by the use of argument or evidence to firm belief or a course of action.
- Unjust or cruel exercise of authority or power.
- To set forth in words; state; to manifest or communicate, as by a gesture; show.
- A belief or conclusion held with confidence but not substantiated by positive knowledge or proof.
- To be uncertain about; consider questionable or unlikely; hesitate to believe.
- To provide the right or a means of entrance to.
Down
- It means not only to accept the truth without checking, it also means to take on responsibility (of that).
- It is the place of worship for Sikhs.
- To be in contention or conflict with.
- The sum total of all surroundings of a living organism, including natural forces and other living things.
- A state or habit of mind in which trust or confidence is placed in some person or thing.
- To become visible;to come in sight; to come into existence.
- It is a counting or enumeration of a population which is done on an official basis and for a specific period of time, usually every 5 or 10 years.
- The act of taking possession.
- Opposite of right.
- The act or process of governing, especially the control and administration of public policy in a political unit.
- To be emphatic, firm, or resolute about something intended, demanded, or required.
- To express, suggest or show something without stating it directly.
20 Clues: Opposite of right. • The act of taking possession. • It is the place of worship for Sikhs. • To be in contention or conflict with. • To convince someone to do or think something. • Unjust or cruel exercise of authority or power. • To provide the right or a means of entrance to. • To become visible;to come in sight; to come into existence. • ...
Natural Science Chapter 1 Terms 2020-09-24
Across
- subdivision of the mantle
- the outer layer of the earth
- Shield: large areas of the earth's crust. This is where the mountain building process happens.
- examines materials that Compose of the earth oceanography: study of ocean
- the study of the universe
- less dense sphere
- Rise: an underwater sediment that is located between the slope of the continent and the abyssal plain. This is the final boundary between the deepest part of the oceans and the continents. Stable platform: an area of the continent that is filled by sedimentary strata. It also includes igneous and metamorphic rocks Abyssal plain: these are usually located on the deep ocean floor around 10,000 feet below sea level. These plains cover more than 50 percent of the surface. The mid ocean ridge: a mountain chain located on the floor of the ocean. These ridges are formed by the plate tectonics. Most of the time it is near the ocean basin. Continental Shelf: the continental shelf is located near are large landmass in a shallow area. The shelf is technically part of the crust of the continent.
- dense inner sphere
- Theory: describes the formation of the solar system
- dynamic mass of water that is always moving Atmosphere: life-giving gaseous envelope
- Ocean Trench: these are the deepest parts of the seafloor.
Down
- the sphere that includes all life on earth Geosphere: the largest of the spheres
- continent is a body of land that has its own continental plate. In the world, there are 7 of these continents: North and South America, Asia, Europe, Antártica, Australia, and Africa.
- basin: deep submarine region that is beyond the continental margin
- group of interacting parts that work together to form a complex whole
- method: the method taken to get an answer to a hypothesis
- A well tested and widely accepted view that best explains scientific observations
- explanation that is proposed to explain scientific observations
- Science: name for all sciences that seek to understand earth and space
- study of the atmosphere and processes that produce the climate
- rigid outer layer that includes the crust and uppermost mantle
21 Clues: less dense sphere • dense inner sphere • subdivision of the mantle • the study of the universe • the outer layer of the earth • Theory: describes the formation of the solar system • method: the method taken to get an answer to a hypothesis • Ocean Trench: these are the deepest parts of the seafloor. • study of the atmosphere and processes that produce the climate • ...
Conflict Managment 2020-03-15
Across
- Deeply seated beliefs and core ideas about right and wrong
- A type of point to that will possible change the tone
- Event that precipitates a conflict episode
- Blank management:to bring perceptions & expectations held by different people closer together
- Providing reasons to support an assertion or claim
- A need that drives a goal
- To not engage directly in conflict
- Personality is influenced by biological development
- Theory that focuses on communication between people in conflict rather than an individual or internal processes
- Type of theory - consistently make sense of the world by assigning meaning and motives to behavior
- Aggression using personal attacks, name calling, & other aggressive tactics
- Defend a position from a competitive stance
- weave together facts, feelings, and interferences to explain the world
- Blank Conflict: struggle arising from perceived interference with goal achievement
- ones view of oneself
- An overarching set of beliefs about ho the world works and one's place in it
- Situation where an individual's goals are somewhat cooperative and somewhat competitive
Down
- The public or private image one holds about oneself
- A demand, proposed solution, or fixed outcome statement
- A theory that models the outcomes of conflict based on choices made by players through a rational process
- Stable set of perceptions, values, attitudes, & beliefs an individual holds about oneself
- encompass the concept that the goals of all parties in a conflict might be met with creative strategies
- Blank Conflict: Issues that have potential for conflict that the parties don't yet perceive to be a problem
- Create meaning & interpret reality through a series of personal constructs or schemas
- The end or desired condition
- A state where one thing or person requires another thing or person to meet goals
- Personality is influenced by social development
- Distributed view that resources are limited
- Complying with the others' wishes
- Blank Conflict: an internal struggle with competing personal goals
- Tangible resources or any measurable factor around which desired outcomes can be built
- Type of meaning - the literal dictionary definition of a word
- Theory that suggests there are types of forces that drive conflict and forces that restrain conflict
- Type of conflict that moves toward destructive outcomes
- Type of meaning - personal association or experience with a word
- Goal regarding the expression of self-worth, pride, or self-respect
- Blank Conflict caused by misinterpretations and misinformation
- A word, gesture, or picture than stands for something else
- Tentative explanations for observed behaviors
- The general conversational area in which a conflict issue may be embedded
40 Clues: ones view of oneself • A need that drives a goal • The end or desired condition • Complying with the others' wishes • To not engage directly in conflict • Event that precipitates a conflict episode • Distributed view that resources are limited • Defend a position from a competitive stance • Tentative explanations for observed behaviors • ...
Research Methods pt.4 2022-12-04
Across
- full details of all references used. Format: Name. Initial (Date published) 'Title@ : 'the journal it came from.'
- PHASE predications made from theories, in the form of testable hypotheses, are tested and yield data that is analysed, leading to theory adjustment.
- combining or analysing collective data from many studies to make into one large study.
- CONSTRUCTION logically organised theory that defines events and describes relationships among events.
- type of numeric data that is objective.
- indicates what the study is about.
- refers to data being collected through direct observation or experiment.
- details of why the study was conducted.
- summary of report.
- numbers
- part of the varication process where research is deemed scientifically acceptable or not, and therefore helps determine if findings can be published in scientific journals or not.
- TESTING uses data from a sample to form a conclusion about a group or population.
- the belief for any hypothesis to have credibility, it must be inherently disprovable before it can become accepted as a scientific hypothesis or theory.
- assesses validity by predicting how well on a test predict future behaviour.
- data collected specifically for the purpose answering your research question.
- results/statistics of method.
- assesses to what degree research findings remain true over time.
Down
- is a simple way of assessing validity and involves the extent to which items look like that a test claims to measure.
- a type of non-numerical data that can be subjective.
- conclusion and evaluation.
- where reviewers may have had an unconscious bias to want to or not want to publish reports sue to personal aims.
- an outline of what was conducted in the study.
- refers to whether a particular method and finding can be repeated with different/same people and/or different occasion to see f the results were similar.
- PHASE observations yield information that is used to formulate theories as explanations.
- assesses validity by correlating score sone a test with another test known to be valid.
- means that all sources of bias are minimized and that personal or subjective ideas are eliminated.
- existing data collected for another purpose that you employ to answer your research question.
- a shared set of assumptions about the subject matter of a discipline and the methods appropriate to its study.
- a fundamental change in the basic concepts and experimental practices of a scientific discipline.
29 Clues: numbers • summary of report. • conclusion and evaluation. • results/statistics of method. • indicates what the study is about. • type of numeric data that is objective. • details of why the study was conducted. • an outline of what was conducted in the study. • a type of non-numerical data that can be subjective. • ...
Beginning of Life 2023-01-13
Across
- microscopic single-celled organism that has neither a distinct nucleus with a membrane nor other specialized organelles
- a hot mix of gases and solids, the surface was molten, atmosphere formed mainly from gases spewed from volcanoes
- an organism that cannot produce its own food
- atmosphere in primitive earth in which hydrogen is present, but not oxygen
- theory that suggests the first cells were likely heterotrophic and fed on organic molecules that had been made without cells; relied on fermentation
- theory that eukaryotic cells may have evolved when multiple cells joined together into one
Down
- organisms whose cells have a nucleus
- an organic molecule such as RNA inside a lipid membrane
- an organism that can produce its own food
- proposed heterotrophic theory
- provided the first evidence that organic molecules needed for life could be formed from inorganic components
- homeostasis, reproduction, metabolism, reproduction, metabolism, DNA/Heredity
- type of atmosphere which oxidizes immersed compounds
- discovered that by splashing amino acids under hot, dry conditions caused them to instantly polymerize into proteins
- published a hypothesis on the origin of life on earth, describing the progressive evolution of matter on the primitive earth and the emergence of life
15 Clues: proposed heterotrophic theory • organisms whose cells have a nucleus • an organism that can produce its own food • an organism that cannot produce its own food • type of atmosphere which oxidizes immersed compounds • an organic molecule such as RNA inside a lipid membrane • atmosphere in primitive earth in which hydrogen is present, but not oxygen • ...
Sophia DuPree - Deviance Learning Activity 2024-02-22
Across
- the means of enforcing rules
- attacks based on a person's race, religion, or other characteristics
- crime committed by average people against other people or organizations, usually in public spaces
- a system that has the authority to make decisions based on law
- crimes based on the use of force or the threat of force
- an organization that exists to enforce a legal code
- a civil force in change of regulating laws and public order at a federal, state or community level
- the regulation and enforcement of norms
- deviance that occurs when a person's self-concept and behavior begin to change after his or her actions are labeled as deviant by memebers or society
- crimes that involve the destruction or theft of property, but do not use force or the threat of force
- a small group of wealthy and influential people at the top of society who hold the power and recources
- a theory that suggests conformity to the prevailing cultural norms of lower-class society causes crime
- a violation of norms that does not result in any long-term effects on the individual's self-image or interactions with others
- an arrangement of practices and behaviors on which society's members base their daily lives
Down
- punishments for violating norms
- activites against the law, but that do not result in injury to any individual other than the person who engages in them
- the system tasked with supervising individuals who have been arrested for convicted of, or sentenced for criminal offenses
- states that individuals learn deviaopportunitiesrom those close to them who provide models of and oppurtunities for deviance
- a violation of contextual, cultural, or sopportunitiesdifferentialassociationtheory states individuals learn deviant behavior from those close to them who provide models of and oppurtunites for deviance
- sanctions that are officially recognized and enforced
- sanctions that occur in face-to-face interactions
- a theory that examines social and economic factors as the cause of criminal deviance
- rewards given for conforming to norms
- crime committed by white-collar workers in a business environment
- a collection of data acquired using voluntary response methods, such as questionnaires or telephone interviews
- the ascribing of a deviant behavior to another person by members of society
- a behavior that violates official law and is punishable through formal sanctions
- codes that maintain formal social control through laws
- a label that describes the chief chracteristic of an individual
- a theory that addresses the relationship between having socially acceptable goals and having socially acceptable means to reach those goals
- a theory that states social control is directly affected by the strength of social bonds and that deviance results from a feeling of disconnection from society.
31 Clues: the means of enforcing rules • punishments for violating norms • rewards given for conforming to norms • the regulation and enforcement of norms • sanctions that occur in face-to-face interactions • an organization that exists to enforce a legal code • sanctions that are officially recognized and enforced • codes that maintain formal social control through laws • ...
Theories of Crime Causation 2021-02-24
Across
- Aims to improve an individual’s well-being and mental health, to resolve or mitigate troublesome behaviors, beliefs, compulsions, thought or emotion and to improve relationship and social skills.
- This theory maintains that human behavior is develop through learning experience.
- Conscious policy and practice of taking advantage of circumstances- with little regard for principles or with what the consequences are for other.
- People with this disorder experience intense emotional instability, particularly in relationship with others
- Is the emotion characterized by antagonism toward someone or something you feel has deliberately done by wrong.
- Was time of severe punishment and harsh torture for crimes that today would seem trivial.
- Can be considered to be the conscience of mind because it has the ability to distinguish between realities as well as right or wrong.
- Someone who terminates the life of another person unlawfully
- Crimes against person or property that committed while invoking prejudices of race, gender, or gender identity, religion, disability, sexual orientation, or ethnicity
- The practice of having sexual relations with emotional indifference on a promiscuous and mercenary basis.
- Committed by structured groups typically involving distribution and sale of illegal goods and services.
- He explain his theory that Humans, like other animals, are parasites
- theory states that society puts pressure on individual to achieve socially accepted goals (such as the American Dream) though they lack the means this lead to strain which may lead individual to commit crimes.
- Theory is the belief that individuals choose to commit a crime, looking at the opportunities before them, weighting the benefits versus the punishment and deciding whether to proceed of not.
- Otherwise known as Pleasure principle
- Can be defined as something that makes us what we are and also that which makes us different from others.
- BENTHAM The founder of utilitarianism
- theory is the idea that people who violate the law learn to neutralize the orthodox attitude and values of society, allowing them to drift between outlaw and orthodox behavior
- Colorless, tasteless clear liquid, which gives a burning sensation to the mouth, esophagus, and stomach
- Is defined as an inability of community members to achieve shared values or to solved jointly experienced problems.
- Is a theory of learning and social behavior which proposed that new behavior can be acquired by observing and imitating others.
- The result of blocking or a person’s effort to attain goal.
- It is the unlawful burning of property of another person.
- This theory proposes that the fundamental or primary causes of delinquent behavior is a weakening of bonds to conventional society
- It can be defined as simply as new idea, device, or method
- Adopted the concept of social disorganization to explain increases in a crime that accompanied the transformation of preliterate and peasant societies.
- Says that crime is essential ingredients of a healthy society.
Down
- Criminal acts committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his or her occupation.
- Focuses on personal ability to control impulses and exercise self-control
- Characterized by sociability, excitement, and stimulation
- is considered to be the founder of the psychodynamic approach to psychology which looks closely at the unconscious drives that motivate people to act in certain ways.
- Category of crime that include among other crimes such as burglary, larceny, theft, vandalism arson and shoplifting.
- Is the emotion you feel when you are satisfied and happy when your mind is at ease.
- the tendency to align attitudes, beliefs, and behavior with those around you
- A person convicted of new crime who was previously convicted of a crime.
- It is the unlawful killing of human being with malice and with “act of violence
- Referring to individual who have active imagination
- according to this school of thought, patriarchy meaning that male domination over male keeps women more attached to family, children, and home.
- Is believed to be process by which individuals are possessed by malevolent preternatural beings, commonly referred to devils.
- Is an extremely strong feeling of affection and it is the feeling that makes people feel good, feel happy, and makes the life beautiful as it is.
- It is the primary basis of the idea concerning criminal behavior, the concept that “criminals are born”. SigmundFreud Founder of psychoanalysis, suggested that an individual’s psychological well – being is dependent on healthy interaction among the id, ego and superego
- can simply define as the breach of laws that are laid down by ruling authority of the land.
- is when someone rejects traditional cultural goals, but still adheres to the usual steps to obtaining those goals. Reject goals and accept or adhered to institutionalized means of obtaining them.
- Crimes refer to those crime that were initiated but not completed, and acts that assist in the commission of another crime
- One who make arrangements for killings and injuring the members or non – members
- Involves an inability to control the impulse to steal. People who have this will often steal things that they do not really need or what have no real monetary value.
- Theory of how the self-identity and behavior of individual may be determined of influenced by the term used to describe or classify them. It is associated with the concept of self-fulfilling prophecy and stereotyping.
- Complex is a lack of self-worth, doubt, and certainty about oneself, and feeling of not measuring up to standards
- Disorder are those that characterized by excessive and persistent fear, worry, anxiety and related behavioral disturbance.
49 Clues: Otherwise known as Pleasure principle • BENTHAM The founder of utilitarianism • Referring to individual who have active imagination • Characterized by sociability, excitement, and stimulation • It is the unlawful burning of property of another person. • It can be defined as simply as new idea, device, or method • ...
Grade 8 Exam Review 2023-12-14
Across
- Removing sediment using water, ice or wind
- shows the genes an organism has for a trait
- credited with the idea of Uniformitarianism
- the type of plant Mendel studied to understand genetics
- age uses approximate age of the rock layers
- organism has both genes for a trait
- develops from some other type of rock
- factors affecting growth temperature, food, and space
Down
- a description of the physical traits
- when both parent traits show in the offspring
- theory that states all organisms started from one common ancestor
- theory that states organisms all created at one time
- different forms of the same trait
13 Clues: different forms of the same trait • organism has both genes for a trait • a description of the physical traits • develops from some other type of rock • Removing sediment using water, ice or wind • shows the genes an organism has for a trait • credited with the idea of Uniformitarianism • age uses approximate age of the rock layers • ...
World Crossword 2022-06-03
Across
- The ideology of a member of one of the Christian churches that separated from the Roman Catholic Church in the 16th century
- The idea of promoting the interests of a particular nation
- A theory that consists of the devotion to the humanities
- The practice of extending the power of a nation by direct territorial gains or indirect control of the political or economic life of other areas
- An ancient Chinese belief system that focuses on the significance of ethics and morality
- A form of government for the people, by the people
- An economic, social, and political system based on medieval manor where a lord had various rights over lands and tenants
- Autocratic rule people suffer under a dictator
Down
- An economic practice where governments use their economies to increase state power at the expense of other countries
- A political and economic philosophy controlled by the state/government where property and production are owned in common
- Excessive conformity to a code of laws, beliefs, or ethics
- A social, political, and economic philosophy that looks at the effect of capitalism on labor, productivity, and economic development while fighting for the overturn of capitalism in favor of communism
- The idea that all genders having equal rights and opportunities
- The belief in more than one god
- A theological system of strong emphasis on the sovereignty of God, the depravity of mankind, and the notion of predestination
- A social system from medieval Europe where people served nobles who, in return, gave them protection and land in return
- A religion based on the teaching of Siddhārtha Gautama who believed that suffering is inherent in life and that one can be liberated from it by cultivating wisdom, virtue, and concentration
- A form of government where everything is owned in common and available as needed
- A theory of reliance on reason as the basis for the establishment of religious truth
- A religion based on the doctrines of samsara and karma
- A political theory where absolute power lays in one ruler
- Absolute sovereignty by a single person
22 Clues: The belief in more than one god • Absolute sovereignty by a single person • Autocratic rule people suffer under a dictator • A form of government for the people, by the people • A religion based on the doctrines of samsara and karma • A theory that consists of the devotion to the humanities • A political theory where absolute power lays in one ruler • ...
Argumentative Crossword 2026-01-23
Across
- The opposing claim that goes against a previous claim
- Offers a conclusion that is not supported by such data/errors in logic that weaken the argument
- Disproving a statement or theory
- Purposefully leaving information out of your argument
- The evidence offered to support a claim is just a repetition of the claim itself
- A persuasive tactic that argues a claim is true simply because many people believe or do it
- generalizations, A broad rule or claim is applied to a specific case without considering exceptions or having sufficient evidence
- The main argument that an author takes a stand on
- The opposing viewpoint of a theory developed in another argument
- The clear, definitive viewpoint or attitude you take on a debatable issue
- This is a known as a contradiction
- features, Parts of text that draw the readers attention to important information
Down
- Your unproven opinion that you are defending using the CD and CM
- a previous statement from which another is inferred as a conclusion.
- Taking one side of the argument
- The place where you get your information
- Using words and phrases to crate an emotional response
- The action of proving a statement or theory to be false
- The way the writer organizes that information.
- A technique that the writer uses to get the audience on to their side
- Tells us what is done to someone or something
- A flaw in reasoning that makes an argument invalid, even if it seems persuasive at first
- Websites that do the actual approved research on their topics
- Tells us what a person or thing does
- The side that the author is taking
- a comparison between two things for the purpose of explanation or clarification
- The specific person or group of people you are trying to convince of your position or claim
- Opposing themes or topics
- Where you are getting your information
29 Clues: Opposing themes or topics • Taking one side of the argument • Disproving a statement or theory • The side that the author is taking • This is a known as a contradiction • Tells us what a person or thing does • Where you are getting your information • The place where you get your information • Tells us what is done to someone or something • ...
Psychology (16) 2019-12-10
Across
- Level of moral thinking: actions reflect belief in basic rights and self defined ethical principles.
- Autonomy vs. Shame
- the period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing
- the transition period from childhood to adulthood, extending from puberty to independence
- the "we" aspect of our self-concept
- Competence vs. inferiority
- psychologist who developed levels and stages of moral reasoning
- Intimacy vs. isolation
Down
- Level of moral thinking: uphold laws and rules to gain or maintain social order
- Level of moral thinking: obey rules to avoid punishment or gain concrete rewards
- our sense of self; according to Erikson, the adolescent's task is to solidify a sense of self by testing and integrating various roles
- in Erikson's theory, the ability to form close, loving relationships
- a period from about age 18 to the mid-twenties, when many have not yet achieved full independence as adults
- Integrity vs. despair
- Trust vs. Mistrust
- Identity vs. role confusion
- The amount of stages in Kohlberg's Levels of Moral Thinking
- Initiative vs. guilt
- Generativity vs. stagnation
- The amount of stages in Erickson's Theory of Psychosocial Development
20 Clues: Autonomy vs. Shame • Trust vs. Mistrust • Initiative vs. guilt • Integrity vs. despair • Intimacy vs. isolation • Competence vs. inferiority • Identity vs. role confusion • Generativity vs. stagnation • the "we" aspect of our self-concept • The amount of stages in Kohlberg's Levels of Moral Thinking • psychologist who developed levels and stages of moral reasoning • ...
PORT 2012-01-17
Across
- "The Big Board" - provides a means for buyers and sellers to trade shares of stock in companies registered for public trading
- An investment vehicle that is made up of a pool of funds collected from many investors to buy stocks, bonds, short-term money market instruments, and/or other securities
- Person who executes orders on behalf of his/her client
- An identification number assigned to all stocks and registered bonds
- The cost at which a share was bought
- a)12th Jan 2010 10 Buy b)12th Mar 2011 20 Buy c)20th Dec 2011 15 Buy d)10th Jan 2012 05 Sell. What is the disposal method used when 5 shares are sold from 12th Jan 2010
- An individual who has passed the NASD's registration process and is therefore licensed to work in the securities industry
- System in which non-NSCC transfer settlement takes place
- The securities, property and other assets that are owned by person or company
- Uniquely identifies a foreign security
- On 20th Jan 2012, Account ‘A’ received 100 shares. What is the term used to denote the day Jan 17th
- Date The day on which buy/ sell entered into Pershing
Down
- Unique reference number for a transaction
- A business organization, such as a corporation, limited liability company or partnership
- World's largest post-trade financial services company
- The cost at which a share was sold
- Percentage of the original principal that is left to be distributed in a mortgage-backed security
- An account on the balance sheet of a corporation or entity that offsets the balance of a related and corresponding account
- A Component part of Cusip
- Securities not owned by an investor, Relevent only when you sell
- A type of trade, Allows its clients to buy securities with money borrowed from the broker
- A person or firm that buys and sells from his or her own inventory of securities as well as for others
- It is a form of retirement plan that provides tax advantages for retirement savings in the United States
- A debt instrument issued for a period of more than one year with the purpose of raising capital by borrowing
- A person who contracts with a clearing firm to handle the execution and settlement of orders
- Specifies a contract between two parties for a future transaction on an asset at a reference price
- An arrangement by which an organization accepts a customer's financial assets and holds them on behalf of the customer at his or her discretion
- A resource with economic value that an individual, corporation or country owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide future benefit
28 Clues: A Component part of Cusip • The cost at which a share was sold • The cost at which a share was bought • Uniquely identifies a foreign security • Unique reference number for a transaction • World's largest post-trade financial services company • Date The day on which buy/ sell entered into Pershing • Person who executes orders on behalf of his/her client • ...
Mind Museum Extra credit crossword puzzle 2014-02-15
Across
- The planet that is most similar to Earth’s physical conditions
- The “ ” model is a theory placing the sun at the center of the universe and planets orbiting around it.
- Refrigerators maintain their cold temperatures by heating gases called “ “
- The kingdom of “ “ appeared on Earth about 1 million years ago
- after the “ “ has formed, it creates energy at the hot dense core region through the nuclear fusion of hydrogen atoms into helium.
- formation of the earth’s early atmosphere, oceans, crust and the moon
- made up of mostly things that are dark and 5% made up of matter which include stars, planets, and galaxies
- Nicolaus Copernicus is a (n) “ ” who first discovered the heliocentric theory
- Long time ago people believed that the “ “ is the center of the universe
- where the sunlight coming from (when you look at the moon around the earth
- when two tectonic collide, one could slide beneath the other, causing the ground beneath it to rise
- Glass is made by mixing silica, soda, and “ “.
- The Earth’s atmosphere can “ “ radiations
- ‘Si’ is the symbol of “ ” that has an atomic number of 28.09
Down
- invisible because not even light can escape from their enormous gravitational pull
- The Earth’s atmosphere partially blocks certain types of “ “ from outer space.
- For eukaryotic cells “ “ generate most of the energy supply by building adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
- The theory that stated that the Earth is the center of the universe is called “ ”
- “ “ is the age of the amphibians about 318- 299 million years ago
- Chitins are also found in the outer “ ” of insects
- Glass defies classification because it maintains the properties of a “ “ even if it acts like a solid.
- The cell walls of fungi are made up of “ “.
- small piece of rock or metal that orbits around the sun
- “(number)” Earth month = 1 complete turn
- the basic “ “ bowl makes use of gravity to force water down (uses in the bathroom)
- Isotopes makes the “ ” on the atomic mass of an atom
- plates are huge, irregularly shaped slabs of rock under land masses and ocean
27 Clues: “(number)” Earth month = 1 complete turn • The Earth’s atmosphere can “ “ radiations • The cell walls of fungi are made up of “ “. • Glass is made by mixing silica, soda, and “ “. • small piece of rock or metal that orbits around the sun • Chitins are also found in the outer “ ” of insects • ...
rkldsmv 2022-11-15
Across
- an introduction
- enlist someone
- spreading information
- a professional solider hired to
- fortified to surrender
- revoke,cancel
- the rate of increase in prices
Down
- a firm solution
- acting firmly
- an armed ship
- a member of a class who volunteered at a minutes notice
- a treaty
- a written request
- violent act
- supports their country and is prepared to defend it no matter what
- seal off
- a colonist who supported the British cause
17 Clues: a treaty • seal off • violent act • acting firmly • an armed ship • revoke,cancel • enlist someone • an introduction • a firm solution • a written request • spreading information • fortified to surrender • the rate of increase in prices • a professional solider hired to • a colonist who supported the British cause • a member of a class who volunteered at a minutes notice • ...
Chapter 5&6 Crossword Puzzle 2022-11-15
Across
- an introduction
- enlist someone
- spreading information
- a professional solider hired to
- fortified to surrender
- revoke,cancel
- the rate of increase in prices
Down
- a firm solution
- acting firmly
- an armed ship
- a member of a class who volunteered at a minutes notice
- a treaty
- a written request
- violent act
- supports their country and is prepared to defend it no matter what
- seal off
- a colonist who supported the British cause
17 Clues: a treaty • seal off • violent act • acting firmly • an armed ship • revoke,cancel • enlist someone • an introduction • a firm solution • a written request • spreading information • fortified to surrender • the rate of increase in prices • a professional solider hired to • a colonist who supported the British cause • a member of a class who volunteered at a minutes notice • ...
Sociology: Unit 7 2025-04-24
Across
- A violation of contextual, cultural, or social norms, whether folkways or mores.
- A violation of norms that does not result in any long-term effects on the individual’s self-image or interactions with others
- Involve the destruction or theft of property but do not use force or the threat of force. They are also sometimes called “property crimes.” Larceny, car theft, and vandalism are all types of nonviolent crimes.
- __________ Sanctions:Rewards given for conforming to norms.
- __________ Sanctions:Sanctions that occur in face-to-face social interactions.
- __________ Sanctions:Sanctions that are officially recognized and enforced.
- Aeviance that occurs when a person’s self-concept and behavior begin to change after his or her actions are labeled as deviant by members of society
- Crime committed by white-collar workers in a business environment.
- Crimes based on the use of force or the threat of force - Rape, murder, and armed robbery fall under this category.
Down
- Activities against the law, but that do not result in injury to any individual other than the person who engages in them.
- A theory that asserts crime occurs in communities with weak social ties and the absence of social control
- A theory that states individuals learn deviant behavior from those close to them who provide models of and opportunities for deviance
- Attacks based on a person’s race, religion, or other characteristics
- __________ Sanctions:Punishments for violating norms.
- A theory that addresses the relationship between having socially acceptable goals and having socially acceptable means to reach those goals
- A small group of wealthy and influential people at the top of society who hold the power and resources
- Crime committed by average people against other people or organizations, usually in public spaces
- An arrangement of practices and behaviors on which society’s members base their daily lives
- The regulation and enforcement of norms.
- A behavior that violates official law and is punishable through formal sanctions
20 Clues: The regulation and enforcement of norms. • __________ Sanctions:Punishments for violating norms. • __________ Sanctions:Rewards given for conforming to norms. • Crime committed by white-collar workers in a business environment. • Attacks based on a person’s race, religion, or other characteristics • ...
Science rev 2018-06-06
Across
- an organ or cell that acts in response to a stimulus
- the smallest particle of a chemical element that can exist
- what makes up CNS
- A thingy. Theory
- the square thingy
- a process in living organisms involving the production of energy, typically with the intake of oxygen and the release of carbon dioxide from the oxidation of complex organic substances.
- a thing or event that evokes a specific functional reaction in an organ or tissue
- central nervous systems
Down
- the process by which green plants and some other organisms use sunlight to synthesize nutrients from carbon dioxide and water
- where animals live
- The hormone that helps regulate our blood sugar level
- a flat, coloured, ring-shaped membrane behind the cornea of the eye,
- non living things
- the stimuli for the sense of hearing
- living things
15 Clues: living things • A thingy. Theory • what makes up CNS • the square thingy • non living things • where animals live • central nervous systems • the stimuli for the sense of hearing • an organ or cell that acts in response to a stimulus • The hormone that helps regulate our blood sugar level • the smallest particle of a chemical element that can exist • ...
Vocabulary Words 2021-03-19
Across
- Swiss-born philosopher, writer, and political theorist whose treatises and novels inspired the leaders of the French Revolution.
- An English philosopher and political theorist who was recognized as the founder of British empiricism.
- An epistolary novel first published in 1740 by Samuel Richardson, which is also considered as one of the first true English novels.
- Comprises the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution.
- An european intellectual movement of the 17th and 18th centuries in which ideas concerning God, reason, nature, and humanity were synthesized into a worldview.
- It was a series of events that marked the emergence of modern science during the early modern period.
- Style that dominated the European art of the 1600s and early 1700s, caracterized by an ornate design.
- a form of rational theology that emerged among “freethinking” Europeans in the 17th and 18th centuries
- Is the epistemological view that "regards reason as the chief source and test of knowledge" or "any view appealing to reason as a source of knowledge or justification".
- A compound of ideas, attitudes, and patterns of behavior elaborating the principle that the authority of government.
- A cosmological model in which the Sun is assumed to lie at or near a central point while the Earth and other bodies revolve around it.
- Renaissance-era astronomer and Catholic canon who formulated the heliocentric theory.
Down
- work in which Thomas Hobbes expressed his views of life.
- French political philosopher whose principal work, The Spirit of Laws, was a major contribution to political theory.
- Was a French writer and public activist who played a singular role in defining the Enlightenment.
- A settler in or inhabitant of a colony.
- The main artistic style of the late 1700s.
- An American political and mercantile protest by the Sons of Liberty in Boston, Massachusetts.
- A product of The Enlightenment in the early 18th century,that was a key institution in which women played a central role.
- Any theory of the structure of the solar system (or the universe) in which Earth is assumed to be at the centre of it all
20 Clues: A settler in or inhabitant of a colony. • The main artistic style of the late 1700s. • work in which Thomas Hobbes expressed his views of life. • Comprises the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution. • Renaissance-era astronomer and Catholic canon who formulated the heliocentric theory. • ...
Creative Project 2026-02-18
Across
- Level of measurement consisting of categories with no order.
- Variable The presumed cause in a causal relationship.
- The process of clarifying the meaning of a concept.
- Research focused on deep understanding of a single case.
- Paradigm focused on objective measurement and prediction.
- Reasoning that moves from theory to specific hypotheses.
Down
- Turning an abstract concept into something measurable.
- The outcome influenced by another variable.
- Level of measurement with ordered categories but unequal intervals.
- Level of measurement with equal spacing but no true zero.
- Paradigm focused on meaning and lived experience.
- Level of measurement with equal spacing and a true zero point.
- A testable prediction about a relationship between variables.
- Reasoning that moves from specific observations to general theory.
- Research aimed at generalizing across large samples.
- Paradigm focused on power, ideology, and inequality.
- Paradigm viewing social entities as interconnected parts.
17 Clues: The outcome influenced by another variable. • Paradigm focused on meaning and lived experience. • The process of clarifying the meaning of a concept. • Research aimed at generalizing across large samples. • Paradigm focused on power, ideology, and inequality. • Variable The presumed cause in a causal relationship. • ...
CH7 Types of Businesses 2023-12-06
Across
- Tom and Jerry, friends with a shared passion for technology, formed a ___ to launch a software development company.
- The innovative marketing campaign helped the company ___ a substantial increase in sales and brand recognition within just a few months.
- Jane, as the sole proprietor of a graphic design firm, faced the challenge of ___ when a client sued the business for copyright infringement.
- To comply with government regulations, the new business had to ___ its name and operations formally before starting its commercial activities.
- In the law firm partnership, Emily, a ___, not only contributed actively to managing the business but also bore full personal liability for the firm's obligations.
- The family-owned business restructured as a ___, enjoying the tax advantages of a partnership while maintaining the benefits of a corporation.
- Maria, a shareholder in a manufacturing corporation, found comfort in the ___ concept, knowing her personal responsibility was restricted to the amount of her investment.
Down
- The restaurant owners breathed a sigh of relief as their ___ coverage covered the costs when a patron accidentally spilled hot coffee on themselves.
- The tech company opted for ___ status, subjecting itself to corporate taxes on earnings while its shareholders paid taxes separately.
- The multinational ___ expanded its market presence, issuing shares of stock to investors and ensuring the business continued independently of individual owners.
- As proud ___ in the successful tech startup, Mark and Sarah eagerly attended the annual shareholder meeting to discuss the company's progress.
- John's small landscaping business, operated solely by him, flourished due to his dedicated efforts in providing personalized services.
- Alex invested in a real estate partnership as a ___, securing financial benefits without being directly involved in the day-to-day decisions.
- With the ___ granted by the board, the CEO made critical decisions to steer the company through a challenging economic downturn.
- The software developer excelled not only in coding but also in explaining complex ___ concepts to non-technical team members.
- The animal rescue organization operated as a ___ corporation, channeling its earnings back into caring for animals rather than seeking individual profits.
- Jack and Emma formed an ___ for their consulting firm, appreciating the limited liability for owners and the flexibility it provided in managing their business.
17 Clues: Tom and Jerry, friends with a shared passion for technology, formed a ___ to launch a software development company. • The software developer excelled not only in coding but also in explaining complex ___ concepts to non-technical team members. • ...
Organelles 2022-11-16
Across
- The smallest living thing.
- According to cell theory, all _____ are made of cells. Another word for "living things."
- According to cell theory, cells are the _____ unit of life.
- This important part of genetics is inside the nucleus.
- ____ Reticulum. Is the passages for materials to move through.
- Holds the organelles together and provides structure.
Down
- A jelly-like substance that the organelles float in.
- Controls the cells functions.
- Bodies Send and receive materials to other parts of the cell and outside the cell.
- Allows materials to pass in and out of the cell.
- Provides energy for the cell.
- Stores water and food for the cell.
- Synthesizes (creates) proteins in the cell.
- Has chemicals to break down waste.
14 Clues: The smallest living thing. • Controls the cells functions. • Provides energy for the cell. • Has chemicals to break down waste. • Stores water and food for the cell. • Synthesizes (creates) proteins in the cell. • Allows materials to pass in and out of the cell. • A jelly-like substance that the organelles float in. • Holds the organelles together and provides structure. • ...
Scientific Revolution Crossword Puzzle 2023-09-18
Across
- Someone who studies astrology and uses it to tell people how they believe it will affect their live
- The combining of elements to form a pleasing whole
- French philosopher and mathematician known for "I think theory therefore I am" (last name)
- Furthest planet, not a dwarf planet, from the sun
- Theory that sun is in the middle of the solar system
- Spanish explorer in North America
- Used to measure angles of stars above the horizon to help sailors
- __________ model that believed the earth was at the center of the solar system
- Planet closest to the sun
Down
- Italian astronomer and mathematician that first used the telescope to study stars
- German mathematician, astrologer and astronomer
- Biggest star in the solar system
- Physicist and mathematician, key figure in the scientific revolution (last name)
- Created the scientific method
- Planet with human life
- A system of millions or billions of stars, together with gas and dust, held together by gravitational attraction
- Contains a vast number of galaxies
- A optical instrument designed to make distant objects appear nearer
- Creator of heliocentrism (last name)
- Planet with 7 rings
20 Clues: Planet with 7 rings • Planet with human life • Planet closest to the sun • Created the scientific method • Biggest star in the solar system • Spanish explorer in North America • Contains a vast number of galaxies • Creator of heliocentrism (last name) • German mathematician, astrologer and astronomer • Furthest planet, not a dwarf planet, from the sun • ...
Physical Science 1A, 1B and 1C 2022-08-19
Across
- A standardized system of measurement unit used for science
- A system of moral values and a theory of proper conduct
- The study of nonliving matter and energy
- An ongoing, orderly,cylinder approach used to investigate world
- Scientific investigation
- Helps explain or describe a set of observation
- A workable explanation or description
- A model expressed as a mathematical equaton
- A idea
Down
- A systematic study of the universe that produces observations
- The study of the composition,structure, and properties of matter, and the changes that take place in matter
- The study of matter and energy and the interactions between them.
- Data that is based on numbers or quatities that include a number and a unit
- The comparison of a measurement to and accepted or expected value
- God commanded to have dominion over all
15 Clues: A idea • Scientific investigation • A workable explanation or description • God commanded to have dominion over all • The study of nonliving matter and energy • A model expressed as a mathematical equaton • Helps explain or describe a set of observation • A system of moral values and a theory of proper conduct • A standardized system of measurement unit used for science • ...
Physical Science 1A, 1B and 1C 2022-08-19
Across
- A standardized system of measurement unit used for science
- A system of moral values and a theory of proper conduct
- The study of nonliving matter and energy
- An ongoing, orderly,cylinder approach used to investigate world
- Scientific investigation
- Helps explain or describe a set of observation
- A workable explanation or description
- A model expressed as a mathematical equaton
- A idea
Down
- A systematic study of the universe that produces observations
- The study of the composition,structure, and properties of matter, and the changes that take place in matter
- The study of matter and energy and the interactions between them.
- Data that is based on numbers or quatities that include a number and a unit
- The comparison of a measurement to and accepted or expected value
- God commanded to have dominion over all
15 Clues: A idea • Scientific investigation • A workable explanation or description • God commanded to have dominion over all • The study of nonliving matter and energy • A model expressed as a mathematical equaton • Helps explain or describe a set of observation • A system of moral values and a theory of proper conduct • A standardized system of measurement unit used for science • ...
Psychology terms 2013-04-24
Across
- Hypnosis
- Cognitive dissonance theory
- Monkey
- Cognitive development
- Parenting styles
- Diagnosing disorders
- Worked with Kohlberg
- Cognitive therapy
- Developmental psychology
- General intelligence factor
- Neo - Freudian
- Classical Conditioning
- Conformity
- Facial expressions
- Behaviorist
Down
- Introverted
- Binet IQ Test
- Shocks
- Infants attachment to parent
- Triangular theory of love
- Learned helplessness
- Psychology of judgement
- Humanistic therapy
- Innate structure in all of us to learn language
- Psychosocial development
- Stanford Prison Experiment
- Taste Aversion
- Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy
28 Clues: Shocks • Monkey • Hypnosis • Conformity • Introverted • Behaviorist • Binet IQ Test • Taste Aversion • Neo - Freudian • Parenting styles • Cognitive therapy • Humanistic therapy • Facial expressions • Learned helplessness • Diagnosing disorders • Worked with Kohlberg • Cognitive development • Classical Conditioning • Psychology of judgement • Psychosocial development • Developmental psychology • ...
Psychology Unit 3 Crossword 2025-10-22
Across
- adulthood a period from about age 18 to the mid-twenties, when many in Western cultures are no longer adolescents but have not yet achieved full independence as adults.
- Stage in Piaget’s theory, the stage (from birth to nearly 2 years of age) at which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities.
- Operational Stage in Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive development (from about 7 to 11 years of age) at which children gain the mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events.
- Stage In Piaget’s theory, the stage (from about 2 to 6 or 7 years of age) in which a child learns to use language but cannot yet perform the mental operations of concrete logic.
- being productive and supporting future generations
- the study of the molecular ways by which environments can influence gene expression (without a DNA change).
Down
- study research that compares people of different ages at the same point in time.
- the biochemical units of heredity that make up the chromosomes; segments of DNA.
- Twins individuals who developed from a single fertilized egg that split in two, creating two genetically identical siblings.
- operational Stage in Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive development (normally beginning about age 12) at which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts.
- studies research that compares people of different ages at the same point in time.
- agents, such as chemicals or viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm.
- threadlike structures made of DNA molecules that contain the genes.
13 Clues: being productive and supporting future generations • threadlike structures made of DNA molecules that contain the genes. • study research that compares people of different ages at the same point in time. • the biochemical units of heredity that make up the chromosomes; segments of DNA. • ...
Aristarchus Crossword 2022-12-18
Across
- Aristarchus' sundial
- an expert in mathematics
- an expert in astronomy
- In Aristarchus' model of the solar system, stars are ______________.
- People ____________ Aristarchus’ theory of heliocentrism.
- town Aristarchus was from
Down
- the scaphe was used to tell ______.
- the shape of the scaphe
- Instead of rotating upright, the earth rotates on an ________.
- Aristarchus proposed the _________________ theory where the sun was in the middle of the system
- Aristarchus thought that the distances of the sun, moon, and earth should be __________to their size
11 Clues: Aristarchus' sundial • an expert in astronomy • the shape of the scaphe • an expert in mathematics • town Aristarchus was from • the scaphe was used to tell ______. • People ____________ Aristarchus’ theory of heliocentrism. • Instead of rotating upright, the earth rotates on an ________. • In Aristarchus' model of the solar system, stars are ______________. • ...
Cartoons 2019-04-15
Across
- borders, surrounds
- fixed or stable
- pictures, imageries
- account of something
- up to date
- recognise, classify
- representative of the government
- choosing between two or more possibilities
- sequences
Down
- fast, rapid
- saying that an event or action will happen, foretell
- shape which surrounds the words that a character is thinking or saying
- amuse
- standard workbook for studying a particular subject
- mental image of something; imagination
- comic strips, animations
- version of a newspaper or magazine
- describes imaginary events and people invented or untrue
18 Clues: amuse • sequences • up to date • fast, rapid • fixed or stable • borders, surrounds • pictures, imageries • recognise, classify • account of something • comic strips, animations • representative of the government • version of a newspaper or magazine • mental image of something; imagination • choosing between two or more possibilities • standard workbook for studying a particular subject • ...
Cartoons 2019-04-15
Across
- choosing between two or more possibilities
- comic strips, animations
- recognise, classify
- borders, surrounds
- amuse
- describes imaginary events and people invented or untrue
- fast, rapid
- shape which surrounds the words that a character is thinking or saying
Down
- saying that an event or action will happen, foretell
- pictures, imageries
- account of something
- mental image of something; imagination
- up-to-date
- representative of the government
- standard workbook for studying a particular subject
- version of a newspaper or magazine
- sequences
- fixed or stable
18 Clues: amuse • sequences • up-to-date • fast, rapid • fixed or stable • borders, surrounds • pictures, imageries • recognise, classify • account of something • comic strips, animations • representative of the government • version of a newspaper or magazine • mental image of something; imagination • choosing between two or more possibilities • standard workbook for studying a particular subject • ...
Layers of Earth, Drift, Seafloor Spread 2021-05-07
Across
- Method of heat transfer that creates circular currents driven by differences in density
- Made of solid Iron and nickle
- Old crust is recycled in one of these
- _____ data is used by scientists to "see" inside the Earth
- The _________ crust is the least dense layer (what we live on top of)
- technology used to map the sea floor during WWII
- rocky outer part of Earth (includes crust and the upper mantle)
Down
- Scientist who proposed continental drift
- Hot, dense rock layer between the crust and outer core
- The boundary between the crust and the mantle
- Continental drift theory was rejected by mainstream science because it was missing a _________
- ______ inside new rock points to the magnetic north of the Earth
- The only liquid layer of the Earth (creates the magnetic field).
- Continental ______= the theory that the continents were once together as one supercontinent
- Scientist who discovered seafloor spreading
- The _________ crust is thinner than the continental crust
- _______ evidence shows that we find the same species of plants and animals on different continents
- New sea floor is created here
18 Clues: Made of solid Iron and nickle • New sea floor is created here • Old crust is recycled in one of these • Scientist who proposed continental drift • Scientist who discovered seafloor spreading • The boundary between the crust and the mantle • technology used to map the sea floor during WWII • Hot, dense rock layer between the crust and outer core • ...
Ch 21: Social Movements and Social Change 2025-06-04
Across
- the process of obtaining needed services, ideas, or content by soliciting contributions from a large group of people
- a theory that explains social movements’ success in terms of their ability to acquire resources and mobilize individuals
- a functionalist perspective theory that posits that several preconditions must be in place for collective behavior to occur
- a call to action
- the change in a society created through social movements as well as through external factors like environmental shifts or technological innovations
- an unorganized, relatively diffuse group of people who share ideas
- movements that seek to change something specific about the social structure
- a perspective that emphasizes the importance of social norms in crowd behavior
- those who seek to prevent or undo change to the social structure
- people who come together for a regularly scheduled event
- a purposeful organized group hoping to work toward a common social goal
- social movements that limit themselves to self-improvement changes in individuals
- using bridging, amplification, extension, and transformation as an ongoing and intentional means of recruiting participants to a movement
- a theory that attempts to explain the proliferation of postindustrial and postmodern movements that are difficult to understand using traditional social movement theories
Down
- crowds of people who are focused on a specific action or goal
- crowds who share opportunities to express emotions
- movements that seek to completely change every aspect of society
- a theory that credits individuals in crowds as behaving as rational thinkers and views crowds as engaging in purposeful behavior and collective action
- social movements that state a clear solution and a means of implementation
- movements that work to promote inner change or spiritual growth in individuals
- the multiple social movement industries in a society, even if they have widely varying constituents and goals
- people who share close proximity without really interacting
- a single social movement group
- a social problem that is stated in a clear, easily understood manner
- the collection of the social movement organizations that are striving toward similar goals
- a fairly large number of people who share close proximity
- nongovernmental organizations working globally for numerous humanitarian and environmental causes
- a noninstitutionalized activity in which several people voluntarily engage
- the process that increases the amount of specialization and differentiation of structure in societies
- a relatively large group with a common interest, even if they may not be in close proximity
- a large group of people who gather together in a spontaneous activity that lasts a limited amount of time
31 Clues: a call to action • a single social movement group • crowds who share opportunities to express emotions • people who come together for a regularly scheduled event • a fairly large number of people who share close proximity • people who share close proximity without really interacting • crowds of people who are focused on a specific action or goal • ...
Bull buying 2023-03-09
Across
- costs what is this formula for: total cost/quantity provided
- cost benefits that all firms in a industry can enjoy when the industry expands
- as firms expand, they can afford specialist managers increasing efficiency
- the costs saved a firm makes as it grows larger, arising from the increased use of large scale mechanical processes and machinery.
- larger firms are more likely to have wider product ranges and sell into a wider variety of markets.
- buying goods in large quantities
Down
- costs that do no vary with the level of output
- costs that can be spread over more units of output for a larger firm making the average cost smaller.
- large firms that buy lots of Resources get cheaper rates
- costs benefited that an individual can enjoy when it expands
- larger firms can get access to money for cheaply
- costs that change when output level changes
12 Clues: buying goods in large quantities • costs that change when output level changes • costs that do no vary with the level of output • larger firms can get access to money for cheaply • large firms that buy lots of Resources get cheaper rates • costs what is this formula for: total cost/quantity provided • costs benefited that an individual can enjoy when it expands • ...
Plate Tectonics 2023-02-15
Across
- less dense matter rises up and pushes more dense matter down
- two pieces of bread with a filling in between them
- the continents move on magma
- the theory that the continents drift
- when magma pushes up through tectonic plates
- when one tectonic plate pushes under another one
Down
- when something goes under something else
- the largest living rodent
- when two tectonic plates slide past eachother
- who came up with the theory of continental drift
- a fermented cucumber
- a measurement of weight vs. volume
12 Clues: a fermented cucumber • the largest living rodent • the continents move on magma • a measurement of weight vs. volume • the theory that the continents drift • when something goes under something else • when magma pushes up through tectonic plates • when two tectonic plates slide past eachother • who came up with the theory of continental drift • ...
Lecture XIV: ASD 2024-11-28
Across
- Someone who lacks theory of mind
- Task that tests for theory of mind
- Location where pinch occurs in Fragile X syndrome
- ASD is what type of condition?
- Disorders most comorbid with ASD
- Last name of the first person to describe autism
Down
- Special talents/abilities associated with ASD
- Process in which your brain gets rid of unused brain cells
- Works with cerebellum for motor control
- Accounts for 50-80% of the risk for ASD
- Enlarged brain
- 1000 of these have been identified as being related to ASD
- Autism Spectrum Disorder
13 Clues: Enlarged brain • Autism Spectrum Disorder • ASD is what type of condition? • Someone who lacks theory of mind • Disorders most comorbid with ASD • Task that tests for theory of mind • Works with cerebellum for motor control • Accounts for 50-80% of the risk for ASD • Special talents/abilities associated with ASD • Last name of the first person to describe autism • ...
Plate Tectonics 2025-08-15
Across
- This is the area where you will find most of the volcanoes in the world
- The layer of the earth with the lowest density
- The theory that plates slowly move the continents over time
- Type of boundary where two plates slide past each other
- Layer of the earth that includes crust and solid upper mantle
- Contains solid iron inside the earth
- Lava that is below the Earth’s surface
- Layer of the earth that contains magma
- This is created in the ocean when subduction occurs
- Process where one plate moves below another plate
- This is where two tectonic plates meet
- The process of circulating liquid as it heats and cools
Down
- The 750-mile long fault in California that is created by a transform boundary
- Large chunks of lithosphere that gradually move
- Layer of the earth that contains the asthenosphere
- This natural disaster is caused by plates moving
- The scientist credited for the Continental Drift theory
- Type of boundary where two plates separate
- The deepest part of the ocean floor
- The prehistoric conglomerate of the 7 continents all combined
- The mountain range in Colorado that is created by a collision at a convergent boundary
- Contains liquid iron inside the earth
- Type of boundary where two plates collide
23 Clues: The deepest part of the ocean floor • Contains solid iron inside the earth • Contains liquid iron inside the earth • Lava that is below the Earth’s surface • Layer of the earth that contains magma • This is where two tectonic plates meet • Type of boundary where two plates collide • Type of boundary where two plates separate • ...
Muscular System 2020-05-17
Across
- theory that explains how muscle contractions work; sliding ______ theory
- used to describe muscles that are striped in appearance
- individual units that join end to end in a myofibril
- overlapping patterns of actin and myosin; I and A _____
- bundles of muscle fibers
- neurotransmitter used to cause muscle contractions
- store neurotransmitters
- connects muscles to bones
- this element bonds to actin, changing its shape
- organelle that provides energy needed for muscle contractions
- minimum level of stimulus to cause a muscle contraction
- this superhero has huge muscles when he's angry
Down
- connective tissue that separates individual muscles
- type of muscle found in the digestive tract
- when muscles relax they (lengthen / shorten)
- type of muscle that connects to bone
- thin filament of muscle fiber; found in bundles
- occurs when muscles become tired
- "connection" between neurons and muscle fibers
- cell membrane in a synapse that is very folded
- type of muscle that makes up the heart
- found at the beginning and end of a sarcomere
- energy molecule; ATP (adenosine _________)
- location where the nervous system meets the muscular system
24 Clues: store neurotransmitters • bundles of muscle fibers • connects muscles to bones • occurs when muscles become tired • type of muscle that connects to bone • type of muscle that makes up the heart • energy molecule; ATP (adenosine _________) • type of muscle found in the digestive tract • when muscles relax they (lengthen / shorten) • ...
Module 9 Cross Word Puzzle 2023-03-07
Across
- an agency authorized by the U.S. government to loan money to assist the nation's ailing banks after the stock market crash of 1929 and during the Great Depression that followed.
- was an American politician who served as the 31st president of the United States from 1929 to 1933.
- the reduction of the general level of prices in an economy.
- the highest concrete arch dam in the United States.
- is a stock market index of 30 prominent companies listed on stock exchanges in the United States
- a record of how a person handles money and debt, including credit card accounts and other loans
- the drought-affected south central United States in the aftermath of horrific dust storms.
- was an American politician who served four terms as Governor of New York and was the Democratic Party's presidential candidate in 1928.
- a line of needy persons. assembled to receive food given as charity
Down
- is a deprived area on the outskirts of a town consisting of large numbers of crude dwellings.
- gathering of probably 10,000 to 25,000 World War I veterans (estimates vary widely) who, with their wives and children, converged on Washington, D.C., in 1932, demanding immediate bonus payment for wartime services to alleviate the economic hardship of the Great Depression.
- intended to lower the cost of home ownership by creating a network of government-sponsored banks and boards to provide mortgage credit.
- the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence.
- getting a loan from your brokerage and using the money from the loan to invest in more securities than you can buy with your available cash.
- cash payments or “the dole”
- prices that the government sets and maintains by buying surplus goods
- enacted to protect U.S. farmers from foreign competition by increasing tariffs on certain foreign goods
- The longest and deepest downturn in the history of the United States and the modern industrial economy lasted more than a decade, beginning in 1929 and ending during World War II in 1941.
- a place where people who cannot afford, or do not have the means to feed themselves, can get a free or cheap meal
- October 29, 1929
20 Clues: October 29, 1929 • cash payments or “the dole” • the highest concrete arch dam in the United States. • the reduction of the general level of prices in an economy. • the forming of a theory or conjecture without firm evidence. • a line of needy persons. assembled to receive food given as charity • prices that the government sets and maintains by buying surplus goods • ...
Mom 2024-12-25
Across
- Region of our family
- Animal who’s skiing on one of our stockings… I can’t remember which one…
- Pebble _____
- Jim’s new school
- It’s the powerhouse of the cell
- Kind of meringue pie you like
- Lauren’s grandchild order rank
- Feast of Eve
- Italian red wine
Down
- Mom’s triumph!
- Unlikely neighbor when we first moved outside Chicago
- Most beautiful at night
- First word of Asheville law firm
- Forever hair treatment
- Homemade at last family Christmas
- Everyone’s stylist
- Why Mom and Hal took their longest road trip
- Key to a good manicotti—the right ___
- She’s successfully evaded alligators
- The Fighting
- Mom installed this herself!
- Where your daughters did some popping :/
22 Clues: Pebble _____ • The Fighting • Feast of Eve • Mom’s triumph! • Jim’s new school • Italian red wine • Everyone’s stylist • Region of our family • Forever hair treatment • Most beautiful at night • Mom installed this herself! • Kind of meringue pie you like • Lauren’s grandchild order rank • It’s the powerhouse of the cell • First word of Asheville law firm • Homemade at last family Christmas • ...
