Archive for the ‘cycle’ Category
Menstruation is considered as a natural phenomenon which usually occurs during the stage of adolescence which starts by the age of 12 years. Menstruation thus reflects the start of the puberty period in the females. With the very occurrence of menstruation, the adolescent girls experience different changes which occur in them, both physical and psychological. Menstruation is a normal cycle which lasts for a number of 3 to 5 days which occurs after a length of 28 days in the normal span.
Unpleasant symptoms like cramps, migraine, abdominal pain, dejection, breast tenderness etc occurs during menstruation. These symptoms last for only a short span of time after which it is overcome. Menstruation helps in the process of cleaning and purifying the female body from the excess toxins and wastes. Menstruation however can be assumed as a normal process of change in the physiological system in the female body. The cycle of menstruation may vary from woman to woman. Some women may experience normal cycle of menstruation while others may experience some complications in the menstrual normal cycle.
Menstruation thus depicts the normal reproductive capacity in women. This natural phenomenon of menstruation which generally occurs during puberty virtually lasts till a woman reaches the stage of menopause. Menopause is thus the stage of woman’s life when one experiences the stoppage and the cessation of menstruation. This generally occurs as and when women reach the age of 45 in the normal basis. Menopause stops the fertility period in the women’s life.
Menstruation is in fact, a major course of change in a girl’s life. Menstruation turns a girl into a woman thereby enabling them to develop their fertility prospect. Menstruation is also known as menses in the regular term. It is a Greek terminology, which usually refers to the cycle of the moon round the earth which takes around 28 days. On the basis of this, thus the term menstruation has been evolved which reflects to the normal periodic cycle which occurs around after 28 days in a woman’s life.
Menstruation as it a monthly bleeding system, it flows out generally from the uterus which is connected with the cervix through certain small openings to the vagina. During menstruation, different parts of the woman’s body is involved like the pituitary glands, the fallopian tubes, the brain, the cervix, the uterus, ovaries and most importantly the vagina. It is very important to be stated here that during menstruation period, the hormone in the woman’s body experiences varied rise and fall.
Jackius Anderson
http://www.articlesbase.com/diseases-and-conditions-articles/menstruation-a-natural-phenomenon-in-a-womans-life-113837.html
The reaction of mainstream analysts to the events of last spring and summer was as amusing as it was predictable. As soon as commodity and metals prices weakened, they were out in droves, tut tutting and warning the great unwashed that we had seen the top of the cycle. They patiently explained to those too dim to
understand their market insights (which included us, I suppose) that the “abnormal” commodity markets were coming to an end and the “bubble” had burst.
It is to laugh. These articles did not surprise me. Many of the best known market strategists and market generalists have not understood this cycle from day one. Anyone who makes even a cursory study of commodity markets could see that there was something very different about the current cycle. The opinion of many commentators and business journalists is that most commodities, but especially metals and energy have not been acting in a “predictable” fashion. Their definition of predictable is a short cycle that passes through phases of under production, shortage, price increases, production scale up, oversupply and price collapse.
This cycle is not different from all others; it’s just different from the garden variety economic boom and bust cycle. It actually looks pretty normal so far compared to past secular commodity bull markets. Those don’t come along very often. There have only been a couple true secular commodity cycles in the past century prior to this one. So generalists can be forgiven for gloating about the demise of the “old economy sector”, even if its based on an ignorance of the data.
The generalist view was based solely on the strength and speed of the up move this spring. They believe that it had to be a bubble because things moved too fast. There is some truth to this view. The momentum buying -and selling- they exhibited was scary. Scary enough in fact that i think it influenced the world’s major central banks. There were real concerns about inflation and the economies of both Europe and Japan were accelerating quicker than expected. I think central bankers were also worried about markets getting carried away by speculative money their loose monetary policies created. In response, central bankers sucked an enormous amount of liquidity out of the system in the second quarter. That led to a lot of trades, especially leveraged hedge fund trades, getting unwound. That is where most of the selling came from in commodities and emerging markets. Keep in mind that in most commodity and futures markets the speculative money far outweighs the trades of “real” suppliers and buyers. It always has and it always will. That didn’t make the nose dives less real or painful. Nor does it mean that buyers won’t use the price cuts to advantage. It does mean the price drops were driven at least as much by trading considerations as by supply and demand. They were trades. There have been no mountains of copper or nickel or lakes of crude oil appearing in front of NYMEX or the London Metal Exchange. Where inventories changed at all in the past two months is has been to the downside. The cycle is intact and supply still needs to catch up to demand in most metals. As long as synchronized growth in North America, Europe, Japan and BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) continues, the balance between supply and demand will be tight. This did not change just because traders saw bearish chart signals. It’s worth noting that metals that do not have developed forward markets and that are not “traded” like tungsten, uranium and molybdenum did not see much of a down move in this period.
Some commodities may not exceed their May highs but most will. Oil already did thanks to political tensions and the start of hurricane season. Nickel already has thanks to tight supply and zinc probably will for the same reasons. Copper may not, but it will also not see prices anything like old cycle lows for a very long time, if ever. Silver, as we predicted, fell harder once an expected “ETF Lift-off’ didn’t materialize but it has bounced and started climbing. Gold has too. We still have inflation concerns. I’m very concerned about just how much drag the US housing market creates. Remember though, that one of the lasting changes from this cycles is that the US will be less dominant in most markets. It actually already is, but it will take time for traders to accept that. If the US can hold to a slower growth track without over shooting rates, the rest of the world can take up the slack and keep this party going for a while. If the Fed really is done the Euro and Yen in particular will keep gaining. This will add to the upward pressure on metals prices – especially gold and silver.
rob rens
http://www.articlesbase.com/finance-articles/gold-penny-stocks-and-gold-canadian-stocks-93130.html
I have a washer and it has Permanent press, quick cycle, normal, and soak. I need to wash some clothes in a gentile cycle mode but my washer doesn’t have one! What are my options?
Wash them in a large, clean sink with woolite or some other hand washable detergent. You can always get a delicates mesh bag and try washing them in cold water on the quick cycle, but try something not especially valuable as a test. It will most likely work fine in the bag, but test anyway to be sure.
We’re coming close to the end of our clomid tries, and I have yet to ovulate, and we will be moving on to injectables after this, which my insurance does not cover. I’ve been searching online for rough estimates for any type of injectible cycle, and I can’t find much. Anyone want to share?
You can easily check your minimal health care rates in internet, for example here – healthquotes.awardspace.info
How does photosynthesis work with the water cycle?
Like why is photosynthesis significant specifcally to the water cycle? I know why it is important for the carbon cycle already.
In the short version, water gets used up during photosynthesis. Water gets pulled up from the ground, into the roots and up to the leaves. The leaves then release Oxygen and water vapor and what not. The two biggest contributing factors to the water cycle are transpiration and evaporation. Water evaporates from the leaves and also is released. And if you make the right connections, you’ll see how this relates to the water cycle.
What is the difference between 4 cycle and 2 cycle oil? When it says premium does that mean something too?
What is the harm of mixing the two?
There are several different types of engines. The most common types are 4-stroke and 2-stroke engines. "Cycle" and "Stroke" are interchangeable terms in this context — it means the same thing.
All modern car engines are of the 4-stroke type. Some smaller engines (leaf blowers, generators, lawnmowers, and some motorcycles) are 2-stroke.
2-stroke engines use a mixture of fuel and oil, which is used to power the engine and provide lubrication simultaneously. These engines have a characteristic smell and a bluish tint to the exhaust. 2-cycle oil is meant to be mixed with the fuel (usually at a ratio of around 30 parts fuel to 1 part oil), and that mixture is poured into the fuel tank, which will usually have a "Fuel+Oil" label on the cap.
4-stroke engines keep fuel and oil separate at all times. Oil is usually added at a filler cap on the valve cover (often labeled with the manufacturer’s recommended viscosity, like 5W30 or 10W40), where it drains through the engine to an oil pan at the bottom, and is then picked up by an oil pump, passed through a filter, and pumped back up to various points in the engine.
2-stroke engines are smaller and lighter than 4-stroke engines that generate equivalent power, so they are useful in handheld equipment like leaf blowers. They are ideal in situations where size and weight are critical, and where the engine will be run at a constant high RPM for long periods of time.
4-stroke engines are larger and heavier, but offer cleaner emissions and a wider power range. They are better suited to situations where the engine will be run at low or varying RPMs.
One easy way to determine what kind of engine you’re working with is that 2-stroke engines don’t have oil filters or oil dipsticks.
"Premium" doesn’t mean anything specific as it applies to motor oil of either type, but a premium oil may in fact be of higher quality.
It is on the same time scale.
The activity cycle is half the time between pole reversals.
There is no correlation.
The activity cycle is twice the time between pole reversals.
Magnetic poles reversals of what? The sun, earth, jelly beans?
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