| abrasive |
A substance used in friction process, such as grinding or polishing. For example: emery
Ãâó: www12.mawebcenters.com/coltslaboratories/gloss.ivn...
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| ABR |
One of five ATM Forum-defined service categories. In this service type, the network makes the best effort to pass the maximum number of cells but does not guarantee cell delivery. Supports variable bit rate data traffic with flow control, a minimum guaranteed data transmission rate and specified performance parameters. In exchange for regulating user traffic flow, the network offers minimal cell loss of accepted traffic. Traffic parameters are PCR and MCR. QoS parameters are CLR and CER.
Ãâó: members.lycos.co.uk/ahsanshahzad/network_glossary....
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| abrasion |
A spot rubbed bare of skin or mucous membrane. These are wounds to the skin common in childhood. A cut severs the skin, such as is inflicted by a sharp object; an abrasion rubs and/or scratches the surface, such as the common scraped knee; and a bruise results from forceful pressure against some object, where the skin is not broken so the blood rushes to the damaged tissue beneath the surface. Dr. Christopher suggests CMM and BF&C. Absorbine Athlete's Foot ?br>
Ãâó: www.findhealer.com/glossary/A.php3
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| ABR |
Hearing test that measures electrical activity at the brainstem in response to sounds; reveals basic information about whether sounds are getting to the brainstem and if the ear is working properly.
Ãâó: www.sparkle.usu.edu/glossary/hearing_glossary.asp
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| abrasion |
The process in which one material (such as sand-laden water) grinds away at another (such as a stream channel
Ãâó: www.wwnorton.com/college/geo/earth2/glossary/a.htm
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