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Define Dictionary Meaning - True Words & Their Meanings
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  • Sarahundefined Offline
    Sarahundefined Offline
    Sarah
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    The mutual or reciprocal action of chemical agents upon eachother, or the action upon such chemical agents of some form ofenergy, as heat, light, or electricity, resulting in a chemicalchange in one or more of these agents, with the production of newcompounds or the manifestation of distinctive characters. SeeBlowpipe reaction, Flame reaction, under Blowpipe, and Flame.

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    • Sarahundefined Offline
      Sarahundefined Offline
      Sarah
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      the firm and visceral sense that modernity sucks, even though, by all rights, it should not; anti-revolution; anti-progressivism; usually triggered by observation of one or more of the following: women are less pleasant and/or men are wimpier than they should be, foreigners are everywhere they shouldn't be, mankind is getting stupider, the more democratic things are the more corrupt they seem to be, ugliness is everywhere and getting worse.

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      • Lanellundefined Offline
        Lanellundefined Offline
        Lanell
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        A provoked outburst, following piss-taking by friends.

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        • Gregoryundefined Offline
          Gregoryundefined Offline
          Gregory
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          œ‘‹›ˆü—´Œ?s most famous gayass.

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          • Montyundefined Offline
            Montyundefined Offline
            Monty
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Something done, felt, or thought in response to a situation or event.

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            • Tariq Zakiundefined Offline
              Tariq Zakiundefined Offline
              Tariq Zaki
              wrote on last edited by admin
              #6

              A force is a push or a pull that acts upon an object as a results of its interaction with another object. Forces result from interactions! As discussed in Lesson 2, some forces result from contact interactions (normal, [frictional], tensional, and applied forces are examples of contact forces) and other forces are the result of action-at-a-distance interactions (gravitational, electrical, and magnetic forces). According to Newton, whenever objects A and B interact with each other, they exert forces upon each other. When you sit in your chair, your body exerts a downward force on the chair and the chair exerts an upward force on your body. There are two forces resulting from this interaction - a force on the chair and a force on your body. These two forces are called action and reaction forces and are the subject of [Newtons third law of motion]. Formally stated, [Newtons third law] is

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