40 refer to the diagram. arrows (1) and (2) represent:
late 14c., referren, "to trace back (a quality, etc., to a first cause or origin), attribute, assign," from Old French referer (14c.) and directly from Latin referre "to relate, refer," literally "to carry back," from re- "back" (see re-) + ferre "to carry, bear" (from PIE root *bher- (1) "to carry," also "to bear children"). The meaning "to commit to some authority for consideration and decision" is from mid-15c.; sense of "to direct (someone) to a book, etc." for information is from c. 1600. Related: Referred; referring.
Gary L. Richardson · 2014 · Business & EconomicsThere are two primary elements of the AOA network diagram: arrows and events. ... that represents a completion of an activity and the start of the next one.
1920, "act of referring," from refer + -al (2). Especially to an expert or specialist, for advice (a sense attested by 1955 in social work). Earlier word was referment (1550s), and compare reference (n.).
Refer to the diagram. arrows (1) and (2) represent:
Refer to the above diagram. Arrows (1) and (2) represent: A. goods and resources respectively.
1610s, "an illustrative figure giving only the outlines or general scheme of the object;" 1640s in geometry, "a drawing for the purpose of demonstrating the properties of a figure;" from French diagramme, from Latin diagramma "a scale, a musical scale," from Greek diagramma "geometric figure, that which is marked out by lines," from diagraphein "mark out by lines, delineate," from dia "across, through" (see dia-) + graphein "write, mark, draw" (see -graphy). Related: Diagrammatic; diagrammatically. The verb, "to draw or put in the form of a diagram," is by 1822, from the noun. Related: Diagrammed; diagramming.
Refer to the above diagram. Arrows (1) and (2) represent: A. goods and resources respectively. B. money incomes and output respectively.
Refer to the diagram. arrows (1) and (2) represent:.
"undescribed," 1831, from in- (1) "not, opposite of" + Latin descriptus, past participle of describere "to write down, copy; sketch, represent" (see describe).
1918 (Venn's diagram is from 1904), named for English logician John Venn (1834-1923) of Cambridge, who explained them in the book "Symbolic Logic" (1881).
Thomas Bond, Chris Hughes · 2013 · ScienceWhich identifies each circle? 1 2 3 4 ... and oil 09ZZ16-31 In the diagram, arrows represent the movements of carbon compounds in the carbon cycle.
also A1, A-one, "first-rate," 1837 (in Dickens); a figurative use from Lloyd's of London marine insurance company's system for selective rating of merchant vessels ("Register of British and Foreign Shipping"), where it is the designation for ships in first-class condition. The letter refers to the condition of the hull of the ship itself, and the number rating to the equipment. Also used in equivalent ratings in U.S., where colloquially it is sometimes expanded to A No. 1 (which is attested by 1848 as top rating of entries in an agricultural fair).
^^Surely ^^there ^^was ^^a ^^Darling ^^in ^^the ^^FranXX ^^joke ^^to ^^be ^^made ^^here... Hello /r/yugioh! You might remember me as the guy who hit you with a **forty thousand characters** (Reddit's length limit) deck profile [just over a year ago](https://old.reddit.com/r/yugioh/comments/8x3t9q/rf_lost_world_dinosaur_ft_hornet_for/), and if I stand before you all today it's to do exactly that all over again! If you read my previous post back then you should be in familiar territory today sinc...
Phillip E Pack · 2011 · Study AidsQuestions 12–15 refer to the diagram below. The two boxes represent ... 54 6 3 7 2 +NADP 12. Arrow 1 could represent A. ATP B. H2O C. NADPH D. O2 E. CO2 13.
A mapping diagram consists of two parallel columns. The first column represents the domain of a function f , and the other column for its range. Lines or arrows ...
"pertaining to schemes," 1701, from Latin stem of scheme (n.) + -ic. Noun meaning "diagram" is first attested 1929. Related: Schematical (1670s).
Image: refer to the above diagram arrows 1 and 2 represent. refer to the above diagram arrows 3 and 4 represent. incomes and consumer expenditures.
late 14c., representen, "show, display, express; bring to mind by description," also "to symbolize, serve as a sign or symbol of (something else, something abstract); serve as the type or embodiment of;" also be a representative of" (the authority of another). This is from Old French representer "present, show, portray" (12c.) and directly from Latin repraesentare "make present, set in view, show, exhibit, display," from re-, here perhaps an intensive prefix (see re-), + praesentare "to present," literally "to place before." Latin praesentare is from praesens, "present, at hand, in sight; immediate; prompt, instant; contemporary," itself from the present participle of the verb præesse "be before (someone or something), be at hand," from prae- "before" (see pre-) + esse "to be" (from PIE root *es- "to be"). Specifically in legal actions, "speak and act with authority on behalf of another by deputed right," by 1500. Also from c. 1500 as "describe as having a specified character or quality." The legislative sens
1640s, "give a false or incorrect account of, whether intentionally or not," from mis- (1) "badly, wrongly" + represent. Meaning "to fail to represent correctly as an agent of" is by 1860. Related: Misrepresented; misrepresenting.
Question: Businesses Households Refer to the diagram. Arrows (1) and (2) represent: output and money incomes respectively. resources and goods respectively.
Aug 15, 2020 — These schematics are referred to as Jablonski diagrams. ... Figure 2: Three possible absorption transitions represented.
I'm not understanding the following method of exact numerical quantification. It should say "there is exactly one dog", where "Dy" represents the extension "y is a dog" but I'm not getting this understanding. ÆŽx\/y(Dy<-->y=x) I'm fine with exact quantification when using the method of conjoining the propositions "there exist at least" and "there exist at most" but this biconditional method with its apparent eloquence always seems incorrect for some reason in my thinking. Here is a pictu...
late 13c., "to represent or describe as like, compare," from like (adj.) + -en (1). Related: Likened; likening.
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