| classic |
The word means 'of the first class' and was first applied to the civilisation of anceint Greece and Rome. It then came to include renaissance art and is now used for anything of good quality 'eg a classic left jab'.
Ãâó: www.gardenvisit.com/glossary/glossary.htm
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| classical conditioning |
When an animal (or person) learns to associate a stimulus with a reinforcement or aversion.
Ãâó: fourps.wharton.upenn.edu/advertising/dictionary/c....
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| class I antigen |
One of the major histocompatibility molecules present on almost all cells except human red blood cells. These antigens are important in the rejection of grafts and transplanted organs.
Ãâó:
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| class II antigen |
One of the major histocompatibility molecules present on immunocompetent cells.
Ãâó:
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| class restriction |
The requirement of certain T lymphocytes for the presence of either class I or class II major histocompatibility complex markers on antigen-presenting cells. These markers enable the T cells to recognize and respond to foreign
Ãâó:
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| class | small class of marine mollusks comprising the chitons |
|---|---|
| class | whisk ferns |
| class | whisk ferns |
| class | extinct gymnosperms most of Carboniferous to Jurassic: seed ferns and allies |
| class | class of fungi in which the fruiting body is a perithecium |
| class | class of cold-blooded air-breathing vertebrates with completely ossified skeleton and a body usually covered with scales or horny plates |
| class | coextensive with the Rhodophyta: red algae |
| class | characterized by the formation of pseudopods for locomotion and taking food: Actinopoda |
| class | small class of bilaterally symmetrical marine forms comprising the tooth shells |
| class | a former classification |
| class | coelenterates in which the polyp stage is absent or at least inconspicuous: jellyfishes |
| class | horsetails and related forms |
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