| abruptio |
[Latin, breaking off] a divorce, most often found in church records, parish books and legal documents.
Ãâó: freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~randyj2222/gendi...
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| Abraham |
"Father of a multitude", the first man to receive the promise from God that all the world would be blessed by one of his descendants, lived 175 years.
Ãâó: www.godonthe.net/dictionary/a.html
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| abrasive |
Hard, tough material used to smooth out rough surfaces; a common abrasive is sandpaper.
Ãâó: www.inlandlapidary.com/user_area/glossaryA.asp
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| Abraham |
He was a French mathmatician who fled to England in 1685. He is famed for devising the Central Limits Theorems, which justify the use of normal approximations. He also created the first known table that shows the present value of a lifelong annuity.
Ãâó: www.oasismanagement.com/frames/TECHNOLOGY/GLOSSARY...
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| abrasion |
Wearing, grinding, or rubbing away by friction
Ãâó: www.armstrong.com/commflooringna/glossary.html
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| ABR | an instance of breaking off suddenly |
|---|---|
| ABR | quickly and without warning |
| ABR | of a leaf shape |
| ABR | pinnate with a pair of leaflets at the apex |
| ABR | an abrupt discourteous manner |
| ABR | the quality of happening with headlong haste or without warning |
| ABR | the property possessed by a slope that is very steep |
| ABR | a mountainous region of central Italy on the Adriatic |
| ABR | a mountainous region of central Italy on the Adriatic |
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