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generic and name
The subfamily name is derived from the generic name of the type genus, Allium.
The generic name Alnus is the equivalent Latin name.
For many years there was confusion amongst botanists over the generic names Amaryllis and Hippeastrum, one result of which is that the common name " amaryllis " is mainly used for cultivars of the genus Hippeastrum, widely sold in the winter months for their ability to bloom indoors.
Nucleic acid, so called because of its prevalence in cellular nuclei, is the generic name of the family of biopolymers.
* The Heading ( 1: 1 ): As is typical of prophetic books, an anonymous editor has supplied the name of the prophet, an indication of his time of activity, and an identification of his speech as the “ word of Yahweh ”, a generic term carrying a claim to prophetic legitimacy and authority.
The term codec is also used as a generic name for a videoconferencing unit.
* Wordfilter, generic name for scripts typically used on Internet forums or chat rooms that automatically scans users ' posts or comments as they are submitted and automatically changes or censors particular words or phrases
She pilots a generic heavy spacecraft called Red Tail which is pale blue despite the name and has been heavily modified with armament and tracking sensors.
It has tried to maintain the exclusive right to sell products using the " Coca-Cola " name and its diminutive form " Coke ", by suggesting the alternative of " cola drink " as a generic name for similar types of carbonated soft drinks.
Caldwell used ' Dravidian ' as a generic name for the family of languages spoken in Southern India to distinguish them from Indo-Aryan, the branch of Indo-European spoken in the Indian subcontinent.
The generic name of the latter is Didunculus (" little Dodo "), and it was called " Dodlet " by Richard Owen.
The most recent prescription weight loss medication released is Acomplia ( generic name Rimonabant ), manufactured by Sanofi Aventis.
The name, which can also mean " hard cleft " in Irish, appears in the plural, caladbuilc, as a generic term for " great swords " in the 10th century Irish translation of the classical tale The Destruction of Troy, Togail Troi )
Epinephrine was chosen as the generic name in the United States because John Abel, who prepared extracts from the adrenal glands in 1897, used that name for his extracts.
In 1901, Jokichi Takamine patented a purified adrenal extract, and called it " adrenalin ", which was trademarked by Parke, Davis & Co in the U. S. In the belief that Abel's extract was the same as Takamine's, a belief since disputed, epinepherine became the generic name in the U. S. The British Approved Name and European Pharmacopoeia term for this chemical is adrenaline and is indeed now one of the few differences between the INN and BAN systems of names.
Though such use is not encouraged by the company, the common use of the name as a generic term has put the trademark in jeopardy.
For example, the " derringer " ( a generic term based on the mid-19th century " Deringer " brand name ) is a very small, short-barreled handgun, usually with one or two barrels but sometimes more ( some 19th-century derringers had four barrels ) that have to be manually reloaded after being fired.
The Gospel is addressed to the author's patron, Theophilus, which in Greek simply means friend of God or ( be ) loved by God or loving God, and may not be a name but a generic term for a Christian.
The generic name is derived from the Spanish and Portuguese name for the species, and the specific name impennis is from Latin and refers to the lack of flight feathers or pennae.

generic and from
In addition, many speech communities on the East Coast have existed in their present locations for centuries, while the interior of the country was settled by people from all regions of the existing United States and developed a far more generic linguistic pattern.
Because of a wine glut ( wine lake ) in the generic production, the price squeeze induced by an increasingly strong international competition, and vine pull schemes, the number of growers has recently dropped from 14, 000 and the area under vine has also decreased significantly.
Rico Hizon ( reporting from Singapore ), Babita Sharma and Kasia Madera are the main overnight presenters on the channel, appearing on Newsday and generic BBC News bulletins.
At first, it was suspected that the strange features of the black hole solutions were pathological artifacts from the symmetry conditions imposed, and that the singularities would not appear in generic situations.
In the newspapers before and after 1870, the team was often called the Forest Citys, in the same generic way that the team from Chicago was sometimes called The Chicagos.
In his discussion of Kant, Christopher Janaway wrote: "... generic concepts are formed by abstraction from more than one species.
It comprises all the end-user needed generic data, i. e., all the data from which any view may be derived / computed.
It deals with storage layout of the conceptual level, provides supporting storage-structures like indexes, to enhance performance, and occasionally stores data of individual views ( materialized views ), computed from generic data, if performance justification exists for such redundancy.
The game has a fantasy setting of the multiverse type, with many different worlds, some of which differed from generic fantasy.
Scores range from 1 ( pathetic ) to 3 ( average ) to 10 ( godlike ), so a generic hero would have scores of 5.
The company replaced the opening with a generic credit sequence, using footage from Son of Godzilla.
The generic * þiuda-" people " occurs in many personal names such as Thiud-reks and also in the ethnonym of the Swedes from a cognate of Old English Sweo-ðēod and Old Norse: Sui-þióð ( see e. g. Sö Fv1948 ; 289 ).
The following lemma, which Gödel adapted from Skolem's proof of the Löwenheim-Skolem theorem, lets us sharply reduce the complexity of the generic formula for which we need to prove the theorem:
Over time, the costume selection extended to include popular characters from fiction, celebrities, and generic archetypes such as ninjas and princesses.
The Hero System ( or HERO System ) is a generic role-playing game system that developed from the superhero RPG Champions.
As we may judge from such items, the first depictions of Jesus were generic rather than portrait images, generally representing him as a beardless young man.
A generic progression of phases, going from low to high amphiphile concentration, is:
The term " municipality " is a generic term, and can describe any political jurisdiction from a sovereign state, such as the Principality of Monaco, or a small village, such as West Hampton Dunes, New York.
This ensures the content ID is different from any created by other computers ( well, at least it is when the originating computer has a unique Internet hostname ; if, as sometimes happens, an anonymous machine inserts something generic like localhost, uniqueness is no longer guaranteed ).
Muay boran, and therefore muay Thai, was originally called by more generic names such as pahuyuth ( from the Sanskrit bahu-yuddha meaning unarmed combat ), dhoi muay ( boxing or pugilism, a cognate of the Malay word tomoi ) or simply muay.

generic and Latin
Livy and Cicero were both aware that highly specialized Etruscan religious rites were codified in several sets of books written in Etruscan under the generic Latin title Etrusca Disciplina.
It was introduced into Middle English, both in the generic Latin sense, and in the narrow modern sense.
The generic Latin sense preserved throughout the Middle English period.
Its generic name is derived from the Latin Fratercula " little brother ", and the specific epithet cirrhata means " tufted ".
It may be connected with the root of break, for its early uses are confined to broken pieces or bits of bread, the Latin crustum, and it was not until the 12th century that it took the place — as the generic name for bread — of hlaf ( in Gothic: modern English loaf ), which appears to be the oldest Teutonic name.
" This is used as a formal title in many states, but also informally a generic term to describe whichever office is formally the first amongst the executive " ministers " of an otherwise styled Head of State, as Minister — Latin for servants or subordinates — is a common title for members of a government ( but many other titles are in use, e. g. secretary ( of state )).
The generic component of its modern scientific designation, Panthera pardus, derives from Latin via Greek πάνθηρ ( pánthēr ).
The generic name originated in Latin, where it specifically referred to the plant now known as Citron ( C. medica ).
The generic name means blackberry in Latin and was derived from the word ruber, meaning " red ".
Both the Latin words cedrus and the generic name cedrus are derived from the Greek ' kedros '.
The tree's common English name, ash, goes back to the Old English æsc, while the generic name originated in Latin.
* Contemporary charters in Latin used a number of additional styles for the Danish king Cnut ( Canute the Great, with Norway as his third realm ; 23 April 1016-12 November 1035 in Britain ) having rex Anglorum in the core plus various other titles, including rex Anglorum totiusque Brittannice orbis gubernator et rector i. e. ' king of the Angli and of all Britain governor and rector ' ( the last two in the generic sense ' ruler ')
The generic name Betula is from Latin.
Consequently, the generic name means " left-handed " in Latin.
This was based on the perceived similarity between Latin Attacotti and the Old Irish term aithechthúatha, a generic designation for certain Irish population-groups, usually translated " rent-paying tribes ", " vassal communities " or " tributary peoples ".
The generic name, Turdus, is the Latin for thrush, and the specific epithet refers to a character in Greek mythology, Philomela, who had her tongue cut out, but was changed into a singing bird.
Some settlements are named after the road itself, such as Fosse -, or-on-Fosse, while others have a more generic form, such as Street, Strete ,-le-Street, Stratton, Stretton, Stratford, and Stretford, from the Latin strata, meaning paved road.
The generic name " Sagittarius " is Latin for " archer ," perhaps likening the Secretary Bird's " quills " to a quiver of arrows, and the specific epithet " serpentarius " recalls the bird's skill as a hunter of reptiles.
The generic name, Vucetichia, commemorates Argentinean paleontologist Guiomar Vucetich, and the specific name, gracilis ( Latin for " slender "), refers to the animal's small size.
The generic name is derived from the Latin word taxus, meaning " yew ", and the Greek word εἶδος ( eidos ), meaning " similar to.
The generic name Phaseolus was introduced by Linnaeus in 1753, borrowed from the Latin phaseolus a combination of phasēlus and the diminutive suffix-olus, in turn borrowed from Greek φάσηλος ' cowpea ' ( often incorrectly glossed as ' kidney bean ', a New World crop ), whose ultimate origin is unknown.

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