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Professionalism language

The signs and symptoms of atropine intoxication have been wryly summarized by H. P. Morton (1939), in the form of five easy to remember similes Hot as a hare, Blind as a bat, Dry as a bone. Red as a beet and Mad as a hen. In more professional language, atropine intoxication (as observed by Forrer and Miller during their atropine coma treatments in the late 1940s) consists of two sequences the first neurological, the second, behavioral. [Pg.12]

Vagueness is introduced by using a natural or professional language to describe an observation, for example, if the characterization of a property is uncertain. Typical vague descriptions represent sensory variables, such as sweet taste, raspberry-colored appearance, or aromatic smell. [Pg.16]

As Scheme 9.R.3 shows, when our TM complex absorbs a photon of light that has precisely the energy difference of the two levels, - 2, an electron jumps (in the professional language, it is excited) from the lower level with to the higher one with 2. In the case of Fe(CN)g , the photons with the right energy are photons of visible light, and therefore the complex is nicely colored (yellow). [Pg.304]

The Java Programming Language, Addison Wesley Professional, Reading, Mass 2000. [Pg.631]

Searching of one or more on-line databases is a technique increasingly used ia novelty studies. The use of such databases enables the searcher to combine indexing parameters, including national and international classifications natural language words ia the full text of patents, ia their claims, or ia abstracts suppHed by iaventor and by professional documentation services and indexing systems of various sorts. Because the various patent databases have strengths and weaknesses that complement each other, the use of multiple databases is thus pmdent, and is faciUtated by multifile and cross-file techniques provided by the various on-line hosts. [Pg.57]

The model developed, which has been in use for many years both for the training of professionals and speciaUsts and the preliminary education of nonspeciahsts, leads toward a universal language for odor relationships, and is named the spectmm or field of odor. This spatial model has been based on 42 reference odorants, including vanillin, and is becoming the methodological reference for describing odors (see Odormodification). [Pg.400]

Technical language and jargon are useful as professional shorthand, but they are barriers to successful communication with the public. Use simple, nontechnical language and vivid, concrete images that communicate on a personal level. Avoid distant, abstract, unfeeling language about deaths, injuries, and illnesses. [Pg.62]

Pocket Guide. When a new maintenance form or procedure is introduced, a quick reference pocket guide can promote understanding and accuracy. The key to effectiveness is a deliberate design to provide maximum illustrations or examples in simple language. If it cannot be prepared in-house, outside help should be sought. Professionalism is essential to good communications. [Pg.743]

Speak elearly and with eonipassion. Tcclmical language and jargon are useful as professional shorthand, but tliey are barriers to successful communication with the public. [Pg.530]

Fach-ordnung, /. classification, -schule, /. technical school, special school, -schrift(en)-tum, n. technical literature, -sprache, /. technical language, professional terminology, fach-sprachlich, adv. in technical language. [Pg.143]

Multidisciplined professionals Extensive databases Language fluency... [Pg.5]

Middle stage symptoms Language - difficulty in finding words and naming objects. Social - familial withdrawal purposeless overactivity. Other - poor judgement/insight lack of concern for the future inability in financial/professional matters social indiscretion. [Pg.189]

The book explains how to solve coupled systems of ordinary differential equations of the kind that commonly arise in the quantitative description of the evolution of environmental properties. All of the computations that I shall describe can be performed on a personal computer, and all of the programs can be written in such familiar languages as BASIC, PASCAL, or FORTRAN. My goal is to teach the methods of computational simulation of environmental change, and so I do not favor the use of professionally developed black-box programs. [Pg.4]

In the American Chemical Society ACS Professional Reference Book series comes, The Language of Colloid and Interface Science - A Dictionary of Terms, Lau-rier L. Schramm, American Chemical Society, Washington, 1998 and a related text is Dictionary of Colloid and Interface Science, Laurier L. Schramm, Wiley, New York, 2001. Both were compiled to be read as dictionaries, but are thorough and well presented. [Pg.561]

The editors acknowledge the professional assistance of smartenglish.com for language editing. [Pg.280]

Two frequently consulted style manuals and style procedures for research papers are the Modern Language Association (MLA) style of documentation and the American Psychological Association (APA) style of documentation. There are several specific differences between the two style manuals and their procedures, so it is very important to find out the preferred style policy for your paper. Some professors and professionals prefer MLA style, while others prefer the APA style of documentation. However, no matter which style guide you use, all three types of documentation— footnotes, endnotes, and parenthetical citations—follow specific and standard formats. [Pg.103]

Revise the following sentences so that they are more concise (and more professional). If you need some help, consult the Audience and Purpose section above and the Concise Writing language tip In appendix A. [Pg.52]

Bhatia, V. Analyzing Genre Language Use in Professional Settings Longman London, 1993. [Pg.685]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.18 ]




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