martes, 27 de julio de 2010

CBP

reading I came across the acronym which means that no CBP
"the first point of contact with CBP when crossing"

martes, 20 de julio de 2010

ACRC

acronym found ACRC of its meaning areAir Conditioning and Refrigeration Center
See also: AD Converter, KELVIN SCALE (K), NATURAL GAS, CD CIRCUIT, RADIATION

BED

BED:A mass of ion-exchange resin particles contained in a column

impedimenta

impedimenta
Baggage or other things that retard one's progress.

Cladding

Cladding
Excessive decorative elements applied to a vehicle

CONN

CONN : to conduct or direct the steering of (as a ship)
Example Sentence:The captain successfully conned his ship through the ice-packed waters.
Did you know?In the 19th century, warships (and, later, submarines) began to be built with structures known as "conning towers." These structures were so called because it was from them that an officer could "conn" the vessel. The verb "conn" (also spelled "con") is first known to have appeared in English in the 1600s. It is an alteration of "cond," which is probably an alteration of Middle English "condien" or "conduen," meaning "to conduct." Since the 19th century, "conn" has also been used as a noun ("the control exercised by one who conducts or directs the steering of a ship"). This noun, though seldom encountered in general English, is likely familiar to fans of the various Star Trek series in which the directive "You have the conn" is sometimes given from the starship captain to another officer on the bridge

martes, 13 de julio de 2010

bready

not meaning "Bready"

autochthonous

autochthonous ( adjective)

1 : indigenous, native
2 : formed or originating in the place where found

Example:

"People tend to admire cultural forms that seem autochthonous, sprung from their native soil." (Stephen Greenblatt, Los Angeles Times, April 17, 2005)

Ancient Athenians considered their ancestors the primordial inhabitants of their land, as if sprung from the very soil of the region they inhabited. Their word for any true-born Athenian, "autochthōn," itself springs from "auto-," meaning "self," and "chthōn," meaning "earth." Nowadays, the English adjective "autochthonous" is often used in somewhat meaty scientific or anthropological writing (as in "several autochthonous cases of fever broke out in the region"), but it was a "bready" context in which it made its debut. Observed English literary critic William Taylor in 1805: "The English have this great predilection for autochthonous bread and butter" (rather than French bread, one might safely presume).

vestigialis

vestigialis a body part that has become small and lost their jobs because of evolutionary change or the nature of anything that is no longer present or in existence

viernes, 9 de julio de 2010

tantivy

I'm not sure of the meaning of this word tantivy understand that it is something like being away from home

miércoles, 7 de julio de 2010

gizmo

I DO NOT UNDERSTAN WHAT THE WORD MEANS ¨GIZMO¨

martes, 6 de julio de 2010

palabra del dia

word of the day ¨plutocracy¨ is defined as follow
1. Government by the wealthy.2. A country or state governed by the wealthy people.3. Wealthy ruling class.
ETYMOLOGY:From pluto- (wealth) + -cracy (rule). From Greek ploutokratia, from ploutos (wealth, overflowing riches). Ultimately from the Indo-European root pleu- (to flow), that is also the source of flow, float, flit, fly, flutter, pulmonary, pneumonia, pluvial, and fletcher.
USAGE:"California is much closer to a plutocracy than a grass-roots democracy. It takes lots of money to draft initiatives, get them on the ballot, and run a media campaign for or against them."Bruce E. Cain; Five Myths About California Politics; The Washington Post; Jun 6, 2010. Explore "plutocracy" in the Visual Thesaurus.

palabra del dia

new word I learned was ¨bibliolatry¨is defined as follow
1. Excessive devotion to the Bible, especially to its literal interpretation.2. Extreme devotion to books.
ETYMOLOGY:From Greek biblio- (book) + -latry (worship).
USAGE:"Fifty percent of college graduates expect Jesus to be here any day now. We are, says Paul Boyer, almost unique in the Western World in combining high educational levels with high levels of bibliolatry."Martin Gardner; Waiting for the Last Judgement; The Washington Post; Nov 8, 1992."Bibliophilia: the love, and collecting, of books. No problems there... But watch out. The next step up may be bibliolatry: an extreme fondness for books."David McKie; The Baron of Bibliomania; The Guardian (London, UK); May 5, 2008. Explore "bibliolatry" in the Visual Thesaurus.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:It is not how old you are, but how you are old. -Jules Renard, writer (1864-1910)