| passive |
A state of a metal in which a surface reaction product causes a marked corrosion rate to that in the absence of the product.
Ãâó: www.stainless-steel-world.net/glossary/a_index.asp
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|---|---|
| pass |
A rejection of a property by a potential producer or an agent.
Ãâó: www.playwriting101.com/glossary
|
| passive immunity |
A person receives antibodies from another person or an animal
Ãâó: www.edu.pe.ca/threeoaks/science/grassroots/bio521/...
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| passivation |
The changing of the chemically active surface of a metal to a much less reactive state.
Ãâó: www.mesteel.com/dictionary/p.htm
|
| passion |
One of the seven modes. Its positive pole is self-actualization; its negative pole is identification. In passion mode, one releases one's energy boundlessly, downward and outward.
Ãâó: www.summerjoy.com/Glossary.html
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| pass | true sparrows: Old world birds formerly considered weaverbirds |
|---|---|
| pass | perching birds mostly small and living near the ground with feet having 4 toes arranged to allow for gripping the perch |
| pass | largest order of birds comprising about half the known species: rooks |
| pass | small North American bush-loving finches: New World buntings |
| pass | small deep blue North American bunting |
| pass | perching birds mostly small and living near the ground with feet having 4 toes arranged to allow for gripping the perch |
| pass | relating to or characteristic of the passeriform birds |
| pass | the Spanish Navy was destroyed by France and England while attempting to recover Sicily and Sardinia from Italy (1719) |
| pass | the Spanish Navy was destroyed by France and England while attempting to recover Sicily and Sardinia from Italy (1719) |
| pass | type genus of the Passifloraceae |
| pass | Brazilian passionflower cultivated for its deep purple fruit |
| pass | tropical American passion flower with finely dissected bracts |
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