| floater |
Attached to a homeowners policy, a floater insures movable property, covering losses wherever they may occur. Among the items often insured with a floater are expensive jewelry, musical instruments, and furs. It provides broader coverage than a regular homeowners policy for these items.
Ãâó: www.quoteforms.com/glossary/glossary_f.htm
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|---|---|
| floater |
An offshore drilling platform without a fixed base, usually held in position by anchor chains.
Ãâó: www.premier-oil.com/render.aspx
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| floating |
The condition where a common mode voltage exists, or may exist between earth ground and the instrument or circuit of interest. Low side of circuit is not at earth potential.
Ãâó: www.uswi.com/glos-d-n.htm
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| floater |
The term used to describe a boulder or a piece of opal which has been released from an opal-bearing level through weathering.
Ãâó: www.wj.com.au/mining/glossary.html
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| floaters |
secretive, giant "gas bag" creatures living in Jupiter's atmosphere. They are about as intelligent as whales and can communicate with one another through electronic impulses.
Ãâó: www.dp9.com/Worlds/jc_glossary.htm
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