| commensalism |
A relationship in which a guest organism lives on or in a host organism. The guest organism benefits from the relationship, but the host is neither helped nor harmed
Ãâó: www.planetpals.com/ecodictionary.html
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|---|---|
| commensalism |
Commensalism - The act of one organism taking residence upon another living organism, such as a worm building its tube on a clam shell (contrast with parasitism).
Ãâó: csd.unl.edu/general/glossary-letter.asp
|
| commensalism |
a symbiotic relationship between two species in which one organism benefits, and the other is not harmed.
Ãâó: www.ocean-institute.org/edu_programs/materials/P/G...
|
| community |
the people with common interests living in a particular area
Ãâó: www3.newberry.org/k12maps/glossary/
|
| communication disorder |
Any interference with one's ability to comprehend or express ideas, experiences, knowledge, and feelings
Ãâó: www.chocraniofacial.org/webpages/glossary_a_c.htm
|
| comm | large and roomy |
|---|---|
| comm | spatial largeness (especially inside a building) |
| comm | an exchange for buying and selling commodities for future delivery |
| comm | an exchange for buying and selling commodities for future delivery |
| comm | articles of commerce |
| comm | a brokerage firm dealing in commodities |
| comm | an exchange for buying and selling commodities for future delivery |
| comm | a commissioned naval officer who ranks above a captain and below a rear admiral |
| comm | a cantilever bridge in Chester, Pennsylvania |
| comm | United States commodore who led the fleet that defeated the British on Lake Erie during the War of 1812 |
| comm | United States financier who accumulated great wealth from railroad and shipping businesses (1794-1877) |
| comm | a piece of open land for recreational use in an urban area |
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