| persistence |
A substance's tendency to remain chemically active for a long time.
Ãâó: www.ebfarm.com/Organic/Glossary.aspx
|
|---|---|
| persistence |
The principle that the state or properties of an object is automatically preserved.
Ãâó: msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/dnwue/html/gloss....
|
| personality |
[A361] In the Paralogisms in A, the third paralogism is that of personality, the conclusion of which is that the soul is a person. Here Kant speaks of "the identity of consciousness of myself at different times" as "only a formal condition of my thoughts and their coherence" which does not probe the numerical identity of the self.
Ãâó: www.texttribe.com/text/kant_glossary.htm
|
| personality disorder |
A deeply ingrained, non-psychotic, inflexible, maladaptive pattern of relating, perceiving and behaving, serious enough to cause distress or impaired functioning.
Ãâó: www.snowdenmentalhealth.com/glossary.mgi
|
| Persantine |
An antiplatelet, but really a rheologic agent.
Ãâó: www.emermed.uc.edu/stroketeam/glossarybody.html
|
| PERS | clarity as a consequence of being perspicuous |
|---|---|
| PERS | (of language) transparently clear |
| PERS | in a clear and lucid manner |
| PERS | clarity as a consequence of being perspicuous |
| PERS | salty fluid secreted by sweat glands |
| PERS | the process of the sweat glands of the skin secreting a salty fluid |
| PERS | excrete perspiration through the pores in the skin |
| PERS | a person who perspires |
| PERS | being wet with perspiration |
| PERS | being susceptible to persuasion |
| PERS | cause somebody to adopt a certain position, belief, or course of action |
| PERS | win approval or support for |
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