| first law of thermodynamics |
During a physical or chemical change, energy is neither created nor destroyed. See also second law of thermodynamics.
Ãâó: www.environment.nelson.com/0176169040/glossary.htm...
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|---|---|
| first law of thermodynamics |
energy can be transformed; the amount of energy in the universe is constant; energy cannot be created or destroyed
Ãâó: employees.csbsju.edu/wlamberts/bio115/vocab/04voca...
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| fire |
Combustion which is rapid enough to produce a flame or glow. A fire, for purposes of Property Insurance, must be "hostile," which means it is not in a place in which it is intended to be. Fires in their proper contained area are called "friendly fires" and are not covered under most basic Property Insurance policies.
Ãâó: www.nv-insurance.com/GlossaryF.htm
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| firewall |
A computer system that sits between the Internet and a company's network. It acts as an active gateway to keep non-company entities from accessing company confidential data.
Ãâó: www.orafaq.org/glossary/faqglosf.htm
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| firearm |
means a weapon from which a dangerous projectile may be expelled by an explosive, gas, or air.
Ãâó: www.state.mi.us/mdcs/Rules2002/crule9.htm
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| FIR | worship of fire |
|---|---|
| FIR | a portable gun |
| FIR | the luminous center of a nuclear explosion |
| FIR | a ball of fire (such as the sun or a ball-shaped discharge of lightning) |
| FIR | a highly energetic and indefatigable person |
| FIR | an especially luminous meteor (sometimes exploding) |
| FIR | an artillery base to support advancing troops |
| FIR | tropical American flycatcher found as far north as southern Texas and Arizona |
| FIR | eastern subspecies of northern oriole |
| FIR | the male is bright red with black wings and tail |
| FIR | a boat equipped to fight fires on ships or along a waterfront |
| FIR | a bomb with incendiary effects |
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