| abrade |
irritate or wear-away by friction
Ãâó: www.kentuckyawake.org/templates/glossary/
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|---|---|
| Abraham |
16th President of the United States assassinated April 14, 1865, shortly into his second term
Ãâó: www.nps.gov/vick/eduguide/chp_7/cwterms.htm
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| abreaction |
An emotional release or discharge after recalling a painful experience that has been repressed because it was not consciously tolerable. Often the release is surprising to the individual experiencing it because of it's intensity and the circumstances surrounding its onset. A therapeutic effect sometimes occurs through partial or repeated discharge of the painful affect.
Ãâó: www.indianpsychiatry.com/Glossary.htm
|
| abrasion |
any injury which rubs off the surface of the skin.
Ãâó: sportsmedicine.about.com/cs/exercisephysiology/a/g...
|
| abrasion |
A form of mechanical weathering that occurs when loose fragments or particles of rocks and minerals that are being transported, as by water or air, collide with each other or scrape the surfaces of stationary rocks.
Ãâó: college.hmco.com/geology/resources/geologylink/glo...
|
| ABR | one who shortens or abridges or condenses a written work |
|---|---|
| ABR | a shortened version of a written work |
| ABR | of a cask or barrel |
| ABR | in a foreign country |
| ABR | to or in a foreign country |
| ABR | in a place across an ocean |
| ABR | far away from home or one's usual surroundings |
| ABR | abrocomes |
| ABR | ratlike rodent with soft fur and large ears of the Andes |
| ABR | revoke formally |
| ABR | the act of abrogating |
| ABR | an authority or official empowered to abolish or annul or repeal |
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