| accum | accumulation |
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| accumbent | <botany> The orientation of an embryo, with the radicle lying against the edges of the two cotyledons. (15 Jan 1998) |
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| accumulating shear | A feller-buncher shearhead that is capable of accumulating and holding 2 or more cut stems. (05 Dec 1998) |
| accumulation | The action or process of accumulating, state of being or having accumulated, a collecting together. <pharmacology> Repeated exposures to a chemical or drug may result in the progressive increase of its concentration in an organism, organ or tissue. Illness or other effects may increase with successive doses. Factors involved in accumulation include selective binding of the drug to tissue molecules, concentration of fat soluble drugs in body fat, absent or slow metabolism of the drug, and slow excretion of the drug. Accumulation is a mass balance effect where input exceeds output. (15 Jan 1998) |
| accumulation analysis | A technique in which an intermediate of a metabolic pathway accumulates due to selective inhibition of a particular step in that pathway or in a mutant that is deficient in a certain step. The intermediate is then isolated, analyzed, and identified. (05 Mar 2000) |
| accumulation disease | A disease characterised by abnormal accumulation of a metabolic product in certain cells and tissues; examples include the mucopolysaccharidoses, lipoidoses. (05 Mar 2000) |
| accumulator | 1. One who, or that which, accumulates, collects, or amasses. 2. <mechanics> An apparatus by means of which energy or power can be stored, such as the cylinder or tank for storing water for hydraulic elevators, the secondary or storage battery used for accumulating the energy of electrical charges, etc. 3. A system of elastic springs for relieving the strain upon a rope, as in deep-sea dredging. Origin: L. Source: Websters Dictionary (01 Mar 1998) |
| accumulate |
roll up: get or gather together; "I am accumulating evidence for the man's unfaithfulness to his wife"; "She is amassing a lot of data for her thesis"; "She rolled up a small fortune" collect or gather; "Journals are accumulating in my office"; "The work keeps piling up"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| accumulate |
Total return is expected to outperform the total return of the S&P 500 Index with shares rising in price on an absolute basis.
Ãâó: https://scs.fidelity.com/help/research/learn_er_gl...
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| accum | lying down |
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| accum | collect or gather |
| accum | get or gather together |
| accum | brought together into a group or crowd |
| accum | periodically accumulated over time |
| accum | the act of accumulating |
| accum | several things grouped together |
| accum | (finance) profits that are not paid out as dividends but are added to the capital base of the corporation |
| accum | an increase by natural growth or addition |
| accum | marked by acquiring or amassing |
| accum | increasing by successive addition |
| accum | (computer science) a register that has a built-in adder that adds an input number to the contents of the accumulator |
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