Sunday, March 30, 2008

Typewriter

A typewriter is a mechanical, electromechanical, or electronic device with a set of "keys" that, when pushed, causes characters to be printed on a medium, usually paper. For much of the 20th century, typewriters were vital tools in business offices and for many professional writers. By the end of the 1980s, word processor applications on personal computers had largely replaced the tasks previously talented with typewriters. Typewriters, however, remain popular in the developing world and between some niche markets.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Vegetable

Vegetable is a cookery term which usually refers to an edible part of a plant. The definition is traditional rather than scientific and is somewhat random and subjective. All parts of herbaceous plants eaten as food by humans, whole or in part, are in general considered vegetables. Mushrooms, though belong to the biological kingdom fungi, and are also commonly considered vegetables. In common, vegetables are consideration of as being savory, and not sweet, although there are many exceptions. Nuts, grains, herbs, spices and culinary fruits are usually not exact vegetables.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Ring Finger

A finger ring is a band worn as kind of ornamental jewellery around a finger; it is the most ordinary current meaning of the word ring. Additional types of metal bands worn as ornaments are also called rings, such as arm rings and neck rings.

Rings are worn by both men and women, Rings can be made of metal, plastic, wood, bone, glass, gemstone and other equipment also. They may be set with a "stone" of some sort, which is really precious or semi-precious gemstone such as ruby, sapphire or emerald, but can also be of almost any material.

There are a variety of methods for determining ring size. Quantities of the main rings in the world are made for the winning team of the Super Bowl. The unofficial record for the largest championship ring ever accessible to a professional sports team belongs to the 2003 World Series champions Florida Marlins, with a weight of over 110 grams and with over 240 stones.

Rings can be worn on any finger, still on toe fingers also In Western society, the traditional "ring finger" for the wearing of an engagement or wedding ring is the fourth finger of the left hand with the thumb counting as finger number one. The signet ring, a ring designate dignity, is normally worn on the little (fifth) finger of the right or left hand, depending on nationality.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Bond market

The bond market is also known as the debt, credit, or fixed income market is a financial market where member can buy and sell debt securities, usually in the form of bonds. As of 2006, the size of the global bond market is a predictable $45 trillion, of which the size of the outstanding U.S. bond market debt was $25.2 trillion.

"Bond market" is usually refers to the government bond market, because of its size, liquidity, lack of credit risk and, therefore, compassion to interest rates. Because of the inverse relationship between bond valuation and interest rates, the bond market is regularly used to indicate changes in interest rates or the shape of the yield curve.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Mars

Mars (pronounced /'m?rz/) is the fourth planet from the Sun in the planetary System. The planet is name after Mars, the Roman god of war. It is also named as the "Red Planet" because of its reddish form as seen from Earth.

Mars is a terrestrial planet with a thin atmosphere, having surface features suggestive both of the impact craters of the Moon and the volcanoes, valleys, deserts and polar ice caps of Earth. It is the site of Olympus Moons, the highest known mountain in the Solar System, and of Valleys Mariners, the largest canyon. In addition to its geographical features, Mars’ rotational period and seasonal cycles are likewise alike to those of Earth.

Until the first flyby of Mars by Mariner 4 in 1965, it was speculate that there might be liquid water on the planet's surface. This was based on observations of periodic variation in light and dark patches, mainly in the polar latitudes, which looked like seas and continents, while long, dark striations were interpreted by some observer as irrigation channels for liquid water. These straight line features were later proven not to exist and were instead explain as optical illusions. Still, of all the planets in our Solar System further than Earth, Mars is the most likely to harbor liquid water, and perhaps life.