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The term compound microscope normally refers to a light microscope that uses two or more lenses to magnify objects. (Two lenses does not refer to the number of eye pieces as does the term binocular microscope.) This is to be distinguished from a simple light microscope with a single lens. There are many modern variations of the light microscope which have more specialized names but which may still be "compound" with the meaning that they have multiple stages of magnification. See related links.
They refer to the valency of the metal in the compound, such as Iron II or Iron III chloride.
Isn't this the wrong section? >_> Square brackets generally refer to the concentration of whichever element or compound. For example [A] would refer the the concentration of A (generally calculated in moles/Liter or molarity).
Monomial is defined as consisting of one term or of a single term in mathematical dialogue. A monomial might also refer to an algebraic expression that consists of a single term.
A compound adverb may refer to:- a phrasal adverb : two or more words that function as an adverb, though they may not individually be adverbs (e.g. every time, over there)- an adverb formed from two words (nowhere, somewhat)- a sentence construction with two or more adverbs modifying the same word (e.g. he moved quickly and silently)
No. When and is used to join the elements in a compound subject, the compound subject is treated as plural.The mail and the attached refer...
The term acid does not refer to any single substance but a class of chemical compounds.
"Chemical name" would refer to a single chemical compound. But chocolate is not a single substance. It has many compounds in it, each of which would have its own chemical name.
Yes. This is called a "compound subject."Examples:Sam and Tom are at the beach. (not is)My brother and my father play soccer very well. (not plays)
No, the word "grandfather" is not a compound word. It is a single word that combines the words "grand" and "father" to refer to a person's parent's father.
Aromatics contain a six-member ring, in which the majority of the atoms are (usually) carbon, where the bonds between adjacent atoms alternate as single-covalent and double-covalent. Cycloalkanes contain only single-covalent bonds, and can refer to any size ring.
Yes, "prayer book" is a compound noun because it is made up of two words (prayer + book) that come together to form a single noun to refer to a book containing prayers or religious texts.
refer to the above subject
A yoke can refer to a bar or frame of wood by which oxen are joined, or a burden.
The correct pronoun is she, part of the compound subject; a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female.Unless, of course, it was a male that was trying to figure out the task with Robert.
It depends on which compound interest formula you mean. Refer to the Wikipedia Article on "Compound Interest" for the correct terminology.
If the collectors primary interest is the signatures, then they are a philologist. If the letters refer to a specific subject or person (like the personal papers of single person) then they are an archivist.