| tick |
a blood-sucking creature related to spiders. The type of tick that bothers dogs and cats are "three-host ticks", feeding on different animals during their life cycle. When they bite a pet, ticks engorge themselves with blood. When full, they can live for months without food.
Ãâó: www.farnampet.com/tips/glossary.php
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| tick |
The smallest movement allowed by a security on the stock market
Ãâó: www.e2.co.uk/finance/stocks_shares/glossary.html
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| tick |
The minimum possible changes in prices, either up or down.
Ãâó: www.nzelectricity.co.nz/H9glossary.htm
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| tick |
The tick is the direction in which the price of a stock moved on its last sale. An up-tick means the last trade was at a higher price than the one before it and a down-tick means the last sale price was lower than the one before it. A zero-plus tick means the transaction was at the same price as the one before, but still higher than the nearest preceding different price. ...
Ãâó: www.candlestrength.com/stock-trading-glossary.htm
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| tic |
Troops in contact
Ãâó: www.ac-119gunships.com/glossary/glossary.htm
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