| consumption |
The fraction of withdrawn water that is lost in transmission or that is evaporated, absorbed, chemically transformed, or otherwise made unavailable for other purposes as a result of human use.
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| conservation of energy |
The principle that the total energy of an isolated system remains constant. This principle takes into account all forms of energy in the system; it therefore provides a constraint on the conversions from one form to another. See energy equation for formulations applicable to meteorology.
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| consolidation |
1. An adjustment of soil particles, in response to compressive stress, that results in lower porosity. 2. Any process that increases the firmness or coherence of a loose, soft, or liquid earth material, including cementation, compaction, and crystallization. 3. Decrease of the volume of an aquifer due to pumping and lowering of the water pressure that leads to the transfer of stress from interstitial water to aquifer solids.
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| constancy |
With respect to the wind, same as persistence.
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| consultation |
A question and answer session with a knowledge-based system. It is often used in meteorological applications that require judgment on the part of the user.
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| CONS | give moral or emotional strength to |
|---|---|
| CONS | a small table fixed to a wall or designed to stand against a wall |
| CONS | plants having flowers resembling the larkspur's but differing from larkspur's in the arrangement of petals |
| CONS | commonly cultivated larkspur of southern Europe having unbranched spikelike racemes of blue or sometimes purplish or pinkish flowers |
| CONS | make firm or secure |
| CONS | make or form into a solid or hardened mass |
| CONS | form into a solid mass or whole |
| CONS | unite into one |
| CONS | bring together into a single whole or system |
| CONS | forming a solid mass |
| CONS | joined together into a whole |
| CONS | the act of combining into an integral whole |
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