| shell |
Another term for a boat. Specifically, a boat used in racing.
Ãâó: home.comcast.net/~andovercrew/glossary.htm
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|---|---|
| shell |
The hard outer surface of an egg made up largely of calcium carbonate; the shell has pores allowing loss of carbon dioxide and moisture from the egg.
Ãâó: www.urbanext.uiuc.edu/eggs/res02-definitions.html
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| shell |
The interface between the user and the system.
Ãâó: www.austin.cc.tx.us/audit/Glossary/LetterS.htm
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| shellac |
Alcohol-soluble, clear to orange-colored resin derived from lac. (Lac is a substance secreted by insects on tree branches, mainly in India.) Used as a sealer and clear finish for floors, for sealing knots, and in "alcohol-based" primers. Thinner is denatured alcohol.
Ãâó: www.behr.com/behrx/glossary/glossary.jsp
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| shell |
A program that interprets sequences of text input as commands. It may operate on an input stream or it may interactively prompt and read commands from a terminal. X/Open .
Ãâó: davinci01.man.ac.uk/ibmcxx/glossary/s.htm
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| shell | cover with shellac, as of wooden objects |
|---|---|
| shell | a thin varnish made by dissolving lac in ethanol |
| shell | a hard wax separated from shellac by its insolubility in alcohol |
| shell | North American hickory having loose gray shaggy bark and edible nuts |
| shell | North American hickory having loose gray shaggy bark and edible nuts |
| shell | having a hard shell or shell-like covering |
| shell | a worker who removes shells (as of peas or oysters) |
| shell | English Romantic poet (1792-1822) |
| shell | English writer who created Frankenstein's monster and married Percy Bysshe Shelley (1797-1851) |
| shell | shooting artillery shells |
| shell | invertebrate having a soft unsegmented body usually enclosed in a shell |
| shell | meat of edible aquatic invertebrate with a shell (especially a mollusk or crustacean) |
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