| irradiation |
Use of radiation to destroy microorganisms, bacteria, and germs in food products to prevent food-borne illnesses and to lengthen the shelf life of products. This process is controversial because some people are unsure of the long-term health effects of radiated food.
Ãâó: www.ecohealth101.org/glossary.html
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|---|---|
| irrigation |
Artificially supplying land with water for agriculture or landscaping, usually through ditches, pipes, or by diverting rivers.
Ãâó: www.ecohealth101.org/glossary.html
|
| irritant |
This descriptor is applied to any substance causing inflammation following immediate, prolonged, or repeated contact with skin or mucous membrane.
Ãâó: www.bio.hw.ac.uk/edintox/glossall.htm
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| irrigate |
To wash out. For example, to clean a wound.
Ãâó: www.providence.org/alaska/tchap/glossary/I.htm
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| irregular |
(ih-REG-u-lar) -- Said of a flower where a series of parts, eg, petals, are not alike.
Ãâó: www.psfdev.com/los/glossary/flowr.html
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| IRR | without respect |
|---|---|
| IRR | the quality of being irreversible (once done it cannot be changed) |
| IRR | impossible to reverse or be reversed |
| IRR | impossible to reverse or undo |
| IRR | any process that is not reversible |
| IRR | in an irreversible manner |
| IRR | impossible to retract or revoke |
| IRR | in an irrevocable manner |
| IRR | impossible to retract or revoke |
| IRR | a region that is related ethnically or historically to one country but is controlled politically by another |
| IRR | the doctrine that irredenta should be controlled by the country to which they are ethnically or historically related |
| IRR | an advocate of irredentism |
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