| fire-bellied t. |
Bombina bombina.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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|---|---|
| firewall |
A firewall is a safeguard utilized by many Local Area Networks (LANs) or Wide Area Networks (WANs) to protect the network from unauthorized access from the outside. They are basically gates that verify the users before they leave or enter the network by way of a User ID, Password or IP address.
Ãâó: www.7designavenue.com/glossary.htm
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| fire |
to bake clay in a hot kiln or oven. To harden clay, the temperature must be high enough to fuse the clay particles. High firing (1200
Ãâó: www.gardinermuseum.on.ca/edugloss.aspx
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| fire |
Fire symbolizes both fear and renewal. A land of fire, Muspellheim, is one of the nine worlds within the Teutonic universe. According to these myths, at Ragnarok, the end of the world, Black Surt, the guardian of Muspellheim, and his companions, the sons of Muspell, will savage the gods and cause all nine worlds to be engulfed in flames (Davidson, Gods and Myths of N. Europe, 37-8).
Ãâó: alandpeters.tripod.com/knightstemplarera1188to1312...
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| firewall |
A firewall is a hardware or software solution to enforce security policies. In the physical security analogy, a firewall is equivalent to a door lock on a perimeter door or on a door to a room inside of the building - it permits only authorized users such as those with a key or access card to enter. A firewall has built-in filters that can disallow unauthorized or potentially dangerous material from entering the system. It also logs attempted intrusions.
Ãâó: www.tecrime.com/0gloss.htm
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| fire | begin to smoke |
|---|---|
| fire | arouse or excite feelings and passions |
| fire | someone who walks barefoot on burning coals |
| fire | the ceremony of walking barefoot over hot stones or a bed of embers |
| fire | an official who is responsible for managing and protecting an area of forest |
| fire | (during World War II in Britain) someone whose duty was to watch for fires caused by bombs dropped from the air |
| fire | (during World War II in Britain) watching for fires started by bombs that dropped from the sky |
| fire | toad of central and eastern Europe having red or orange patches on its underside |
| fire | a performer who pretends to swallow fire |
| fire | a belligerent grouch |
| fire | a member of a fire department who tries to extinguish fires |
| fire | poinsettia of United States and eastern Mexico |
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