| cost |
something of value, usually an amount of money, given up in exchange for something else, usually goods or services. All expenses are costs, but not all costs are expenses. (An expense is the cost of resources used to produce revenue.) As a verb, cost means to estimate the amount of money needed to produce a product or perform a service.
Ãâó: www.ots.treas.gov/glossary/gloss-c.html
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| costa |
The most anterior (leading) edge of a wing. Also called costal margin.
Ãâó: www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/er/invertebrates/butt...
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| cosmic rays |
Streams of very high energy nuclear particles, commonly protons, that bombard the Earth and Moon from all directions.
Ãâó: history.nasa.gov/EP-95/glossary.htm
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| cosmopolitan |
widely distributed in many countries, with no obvious country (or region) of origin.
Ãâó: members.iinet.net.au/~weeds/western_weeds/glossary...
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| costiveness |
Constipation
Ãâó: www.swcp.com/~dhickman/journals/V1I1-2/medicalterm...
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| COS | leaves used sparingly (because of bitter overtones) in sauces and soups and stuffings |
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| COS | tansy-scented Eurasian perennial herb with buttonlike yellow flowers |
| COS | one of several veins connecting intercostal veins with the lateral thoracic vein or the thoracoepigastric vein |
| COS | inflammation at the junction of a rib and its cartilage |
| COS | pecuniary reimbursement to the winning party for the expenses of litigation |
| COS | the attire worn in a play or at a fancy dress ball |
| COS | the attire characteristic of a country or a time or a social class |
| COS | unusual or period attire not characteristic of or appropriate to the time and place |
| COS | the prevalent fashion of dress (including accessories and hair style as well as garments) |
| COS | dress in a costume |
| COS | furnish with costumes |
| COS | characterized by the use of period costume or fancy dress |
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