| graphite |
Graphite is a soft, crystalline form of carbon. Other forms are diamond and fullerenes ("buckyballs"). It is gray to black, opaque, and has a metallic luster. It is flexible but not elastic. Graphite occurs naturally in metamorphic rocks such as marble, schist, and gneiss. It exhibits the properties of a metal and a nonmetal, which make it suitable for many industrial applications. The metallic properties include thermal and electrical conductivity. ...
Ãâó: www.energyweb.net/mining/jargon/default.asp
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| graphology |
the study of writing systems
Ãâó: www.nwlg.org/pages/resources/knowitall/resources/e...
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| graph |
In counted cross-stitch (as opposed to stamped cross-stitch), the pattern is printed on a symboled chart. Each symbol represents a color and each square represents the number of threads on the fabric that you should stitch over. To follow a chart, you must carefully count the stitches you make in each color.
Ãâó: www.bhg.com/bhg/story.jhtml
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| graphite |
A soft form of the element carbon. It is used for pencil leads, as a lubricant, as a moderator in nuclear reactors, and for other products. It does not burn easily or fuse at high temperatures, and is an important material in the construction of phosphoric acid fuel cells.
Ãâó: americanhistory.si.edu/fuelcells/glossary.htm
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| graph |
A geometric diagram consisting of a finite number of dots called vertices joined by a finite number of curved or straight line segments called edges.
Ãâó: www.york.cuny.edu/~wu/jm/Glossary.htm
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