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Colloquially and type
Colloquially, it refers to excessive bias in judging one's own country as superior to others — an extreme type of nationalism.

Colloquially and set
Colloquially, the set is often referred to as " the stretch ", although this term actually only refers to one part of the pitching motion when pitching from the set.

Colloquially and is
** König's theorem: Colloquially, the sum of a sequence of cardinals is strictly less than the product of a sequence of larger cardinals.
Colloquially, the term is often used to mean application software.
( Colloquially, the school name is called " big name " ( 大名 ), whereas the " milk name " is known as the " small name " ( 小名 ).
Colloquially, the common chimpanzee is often called the chimpanzee ( or " chimp "), though technically this term refers to both species in the genus Pan: the common chimpanzee and the closely related bonobo, formerly called the pygmy chimpanzee.
Colloquially, the phrase " genetic makeup " is sometimes used to signify the genome of a particular individual or organism.
Colloquially, the term " monorail " is often used erroneously to describe any form of elevated rail or people mover.
Colloquially, the term " platypi " is also used for the plural, although this is technically incorrect and a form of pseudo-Latin ; the correct Greek plural would be " platypodes ".
is sometimes called the reduced density matrix of on subsystem A. Colloquially, we " trace out " system B to obtain the reduced density matrix on A.
Colloquially, retirement is also referred to as " leaving the jianghu " ( 退出江湖 ).
Colloquially the word micrometer is often shortened to mike or mic () ().
Colloquially, often a simple June Fourth () is used.
Colloquially, Staines remains associated with the former, historical, or geographic county of Middlesex, through its cultural and sporting affiliations, and the form of mail addressing preferred by the Post Office ( officially the use of a county on postal addresses was phased out over the period 1996-2000, but is still widely used in practice ).
Colloquially, the Virginia opossum is frequently called simply possum.
Colloquially, the species is also known ( incorrectly ) as Douglas Pine or simply as Doug-fir.
Colloquially, this is known as " throwing good money after bad ".
Colloquially it is called Hesari.
Colloquially speaking, the genus g of a Riemann surface is its number of handles ; for example the genus of the Riemann surface shown at the right is three.
Colloquially, when a magnet is " magnetized " it has remanence.
Colloquially, the expression " todo a 100 " implies that something is either cheap, kitsch or low quality.
Colloquially, the genitive is often dropped in favor of the dative even if correct grammatical usage demands the genitive.
Colloquially, particle physicists often speak of certain physical " constants " as varying with the energy of an interaction, though in fact it is the renormalization scale that is the independent quantity.

Colloquially and sometimes
Colloquially, the terms are sometimes used interchangeably however.
Colloquially, a person engaging in the activity is sometimes called a gasper.
Colloquially the thornbill is sometimes referred to as a “ tit ” by locals, but in reality the Australian continent lacks any true tits, albeit Acanthiza species do show some similarities with tits in their behaviour.
Colloquially the site and / or project are thus sometimes called " Soyuz at Sinnamary ".

Colloquially and on
Colloquially, the term " negative brand equity " may be used to describe a product or service where a brand has a negligible effect on a product level when compared to a no-name or private label product.
Colloquially, use of the fastball is called throwing heat or putting steam on it, among many other variants.
Colloquially, anything which is received in a non-operational ( broken ) state can be called ' DOA ' or ' dead on arrival ' ( or, alternatively, ' defective on arrival ').
Colloquially, the name of the draft each year takes on the form of the NFL season in which players picked could begin playing.
Colloquially meaning a game in which a group of people jump on top of each other to form a pile.
Colloquially, a maximum matchpoints score on a board is known as a " top ", and a zero score is a " bottom ".
Colloquially described as a " Fish with a flick-knife ", due mainly to their calm nature, such attacks on humans are rare.

Colloquially and called
Colloquially, these experiments are commonly called " test tube experiments ".
Colloquially, corrosives may be called " poisons " but the concepts are technically distinct.
Colloquially, the invasion became known as a ' Police Action ', but this is a misnomer for what was called Operation Polo, led by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, in 1948, the year following Indian independence.
Colloquially it also called exit visa.
Colloquially, any shoulder straps with marks are also called epaulettes.
Colloquially, it was also called the shrapnel helmet, Tommy helmet, or Tin Hat, and in the United States known as a doughboy helmet.
Colloquially gymnasium refers to what is formally called STX.
Colloquially called the Port Authority, the bus terminal is located in Midtown at 625 8th Avenue, one block east of the Lincoln Tunnel and one block west of Times Square.
Colloquially called the " Forty ", this innovation has since become a common handgun cartridge among law enforcement agencies in the U. S., while the popularity of the parent 10mm Auto has diminished.
Colloquially called the " red duster ".
Colloquially, women in niqab are called, with the plural.
Colloquially the Field Service cap is occasionally mistakenly called a forage cap but this is incorrect and it has never appeared in War Office or Ministry of Defence official publications under that name.
Colloquially called creeping eruption due to the way it looks, the disease is also somewhat ambiguously known as " ground itch " or ( in some parts of the Southern USA ) " sandworms ", as the larvae like to live in sandy soil.
Colloquially, the latter form is also called the Oslo dialect, which is misleading since the Oslo dialect predates the Dano-Norwegian koiné, and though both influenced by and partially replaced by standard østnorsk, it is still in use, and since the koiné language is not a dialect.
Colloquially, in India, it is often called green potato.

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