| Curie |
A measure of the amount of radioactivity in a material. One Curie is 37 billion atoms undergoing radioactive decay each second.
Ãâó: www.cdc.gov/niosh/2001-133o.html
|
|---|---|
| curvature |
A bend that may be present in a particular body structure, eg, the spine.
Ãâó: www.spinalnet.co.uk/EEndCom/GBCON/homepage.nsf/0/7...
|
| current |
The flow of charge carriers (holes or electrons) through a conducting wire or crystal.
Ãâó: www.pbs.org/transistor/glossary.html
|
| curvature |
the deviation of an object or of space or of spacetime from a flat form and therefore from the rules of geometry codified by Euclid.
Ãâó: www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/elegant/glossary.html
|
| curettage |
The use of a curettage, a spoon-shaped instrument, designed to scrape tissue from a cavity. Uterine curettage means scraping to remove the contents of the lining of the uterus.
Ãâó: www.pbs.org/secondopinion/episodes/cervicalcancera...
|
| CUR | an English breed having a tightly curled black or liver-colored coat |
|---|---|
| CUR | shrubby clematis of the eastern United States having curly foliage |
| CUR | perennial gumweed of western and central North America |
| CUR | a crusty irascible cantankerous old person full of stubborn ideas |
| CUR | brusque and surly and forbidding |
| CUR | widely distributed tree of eastern Australia yielding a tough durable fiber and soft light attractively grained wood |
| CUR | any of several tart red or black berries used primarily for jellies and jams |
| CUR | small dried seedless raisin grown in the Mediterranean region and California |
| CUR | any of various deciduous shrubs of the genus Ribes bearing currants |
| CUR | any of various deciduous shrubs of the genus Ribes bearing currants |
| CUR | bluish black fruit-eating bird with a bell-like call |
| CUR | general acceptance or use |
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