Asked in Personal Health at 6:24 PM on January 31, 2009 Tags: types, dystonia more.
Diamonds are crystalline carbon and there is no type as such. Its is bit tricky question to answer though it can be divided into various sub-category such as - a) White (colorless) diamondb) Black diamond c) Gemstone - It has many variety and comes in many different colors which are called - Emerald, Sapphire, Ruby and lot more - each stone has its own unique quality. However, diamonds is further classified broadly under the categories of Natural Diamond, Synthetic Industrial Diamond and Thin Film Diamonds on the basis of their process of origination.
There are 14 types of doctors like1. Podiatrist - Foot Doctor2. Optometrist - Eye Doctor3.
Dentist - Tooth Doctor4. Urologist - Deals with Bladder5. Pediatrician - Child doctor6.
Oncologist - Cancer Doctor7 . Neurologist - deals with Nerves and Brain Problems8. Cardiologist - Heart Doctor9 .
Nephrologist - Kidney Doctor10. Dermatologist - Deals with skin problems11. Gastrologist - Deals with Digestive system12 .
Endocrinologist- Deals with thyroid problems13. Rheumatologist- Deals with muscle problems14. Obstetrician - Deals with child birth.
The different types of drugs are put into classes. A few of the classes are opiates, psychedelics, dissociates, anti-anxiolytics, stimulants, cannaboid, barbiturates, and steroids.
Editorial of information pooled editorial mood editorial editorial of interpretation editorial of criticism editorial of commendation special occations editorial of arguementation Types of editorial Topical Division 1 ) News-based editorial 2) Policy based editorial 3) Social Editorial 4) special Editorial 5) Interest Based editorial 6) Regional level Editorial 7) National level editorial 8) International level Editorial Stylish Division: 1 ) Sentimental editorial 2) Logical Editorial 3 ) Sentimental and logical editorial 4) Explanatory Editorial 5) Critical Editorial 6) Appreciative Editorial.
Language branch of medicine humanities subject signed language musical notation Semitic language Slavic language artificial language Berber language Iranian language Volta-Congo language Finno-Ugric language written language Tai language Chadic language written language with an abjad Economics social and behavioural science the JavaScript language science Object-oriented programming language assembly language programming language Indo-European language strongly-typed programming language scripting programming language Austro-Asiatic languages Functional programming language Eskimo-Aleut language Germanic language spoken dialect South Caucasian language Romance language Devanagari-script written language creole language imperative programming language Tai-Kadai language Celtic language applied science Mon-Khmer language statically-typed programming language Uralic language Indo-Aryan language Turkic language human language Bantu language Altaic language Austronesian language Dravidian language Afro-Asiatic language Mayan language Amerindian language extinct language Goidelic language Sino-Tibetan language written language using an abugida Chinese dialect Northeast Caucasian language JScript spoken language logical programming language Japonic languages Niger-Congo language Baltic language logographic written language weakly-typed programming language Cushitic language Dynamic programming language Malayo-Polynesian language Mande Tibeto-Burman languages Mongolic language Tupian language Muskogean family language JScript . NET branch of complementary medicine Kwa language ISO 639 macrolanguage Munda language living language Brahmic-script language language in an African or Southwest Asian family branch of engineering branch of law alphabet duck-typed programming language Micronesian language controlled natural language moribund language Arabic-script written language Atlantic language Central Pacific language branch of mathematics Tibetan-script written language Fula-Wolof language Mel language Misumalpan language Cyrillic-script written language Latin-script written language branch of economics.
Volta-Congo language Volta-Congo language In the classification of African languages, Volta–Congo, the hypothetical major branch of the Niger-Congo family Finno-Ugric language Finno-Ugric language Finno-Ugric language (a subfamily of Uralic languages) wikipedia written language written language written language (communication by means of written symbols (either printed or handwritten)) wikipedia Tai language Tai language Tai language (a subclass of the Tai-Kadai language family) wikipedia Chadic language Chadic language Chadic language (a family of Afroasiatic tonal languages (mostly two tones) spoken in the regions west and south of Lake Chad in north central Africa) wikipedia written language with an abjad written language with an abjad written language with an abjad (a written language with a script that represents consonants but not vowels) Economics Economics Organized Principles of Economic Knowledge social and behavioural science social and behavioural science (branch of study to do with society and behaviour) the JavaScript language the JavaScript language, the language often used for client-side web development wikipedia science scientific subject (a subject that is mainly involved with the objective study of phenomena) wikipedia Object-oriented programming language Object-oriented programming language (a programming language whose architecture supports collaborating software entities passing messages) assembly language assembly language (low-level language for programming computers) wikipedia programming language programming language (an artificial language designed for providing instructions to a computer) wikipedia Indo-European language Indo-European language (the family of languages that by 1000 BC were spoken throughout Europe and in parts of southwestern and southern Asia) wikipedia strongly-typed programming language strongly-typed programming language (a programming language in which every memory object as a well-defined type) scripting programming language scripting langauge, a programming language that is typically dynamically typed, interpreted not compiled, and used as a control mechanism for another application wikipedia Austro-Asiatic languages Austro-Asiatic language (a family of languages spoken in southern and southeastern Asia) Functional programming language Functional programming language (one kind of programming language) wikipedia Eskimo-Aleut language Eskimo-Aleut language (a language in the family that includes Eskimo and Aleut) Germanic language Germanic language (a branch of the Indo-European family of languages; members that are spoken currently fall into two major groups: Scandinavian and West Germanic) wikipedia spoken dialect spoken dialect (dialect of a spoken human language) wikipedia South Caucasian language South Caucasian language (one of a language group spoken in the South Caucasus) Romance language Romance language (the group of languages derived from Latin) wikipedia Devanagari-script written language Devanagari-script written language (a language written in the Devanagari alphabet) wikipedia creole language creole language (a stable language often spoken in colonies of European countries) wikipedia imperative programming language imperative programming language (a language consisting primarily of command statements which alter the state of the machine) wikipedia Tai-Kadai language Tai-Kadai language (a language family with proposed links to the Sino-Tibetan and Austronesian families) Celtic language Celtic language (one of a group of Indo-European languages, predominantly now spoken in the British Isles - the largest extant examples being Welsh and Gaelic) wikipedia applied science applied science (a discipline applying scientific knowledge to practical problems, such as the engineering disciplines, applied mathematics etc) wikipedia Mon-Khmer language Mon-Khmer language (a language family of Southeast Asia) statically-typed programming language statically-typed programming language (a programming language in which a program's type system is fixed during runtime) wikipedia Uralic language Uralic language (a family of Ural-Altaic languages) wikipedia Indo-Aryan language Indo-Aryan language ( a family of languages, mostly spoken in the Indian subcontinent) wikipedia Turkic language Turkic language (a subfamily of Altaic languages) wikipedia human language human language (a language that is spoken, written, or signed by humans for general-purpose communication) wikipedia Bantu language Bantu language (a family of Niger-Congo languages) wikipedia Altaic language Altaic language (a group of related languages spoken in Asia and southeastern Europe) wikipedia Austronesian language Austronesian language (the family of languages spoken in Australia and Formosa and Malaysia and Polynesia) wikipedia Dravidian language Dravidian language (a large family of languages spoken in south and central India and Sri Lanka) wikipedia Afro-Asiatic language Afro-Asiatic language (a large family of related languages spoken both in Asia and Africa) wikipedia Mayan language Mayan language (one of a family of American Indian languages spoken by Maya) wikipedia Amerindian language Amerindian language (any of the languages spoken by Amerindians) wikipedia extinct language extinct language (a language which no longer has any native speakers) wikipedia Goidelic language Goidelic language, sometimes colloquially called 'Gaelic,' one of the subclass of Celtic languages consisting of Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Manx wikipedia Sino-Tibetan language Sino-Tibetan language (the family of tonal languages spoken in eastern Asia) wikipedia written language using an abugida written language using an abugida (a language that uses symbols to represent consonants but not vowels) wikipedia Chinese dialect Chinese dialect (one of the mutually unintelligible varieties of the Chinese language) wikipedia Northeast Caucasian language Northeast Caucasian language (a language spoken in some Russian republics) wikipedia JScript JScript, the Microsoft dialect of the ECMAScript scripting programming language specification wikipedia spoken language spoken language (the spoken form of a human language) wikipedia logical programming language logical programming language (a type of programming language that uses mathematical logic as it's basis) wikipedia Japonic languages Japonic language (any of the Japanese or Ryukyuan languages) wikipedia Niger-Congo language Niger-Congo language (an African language family) wikipedia Baltic language Baltic language (a branch of the Indo-European family of languages related to the Slavonic languages; Baltic languages have preserved many archaic features that are believed to have existed in Proto-Indo European) wikipedia logographic written language logographic written language (a language that uses pictures to represent words) wikipedia weakly-typed programming language weakly-typed programming language (a programming language in which memory objects can be implicitly reinterpreted as various types) Cushitic language Cushitic language (an Afro-Asiatic language spoken in the Horn of Africa) wikipedia Dynamic programming language Dynamic programming language (a programming language in which a program's type system and executable code may be altered at runtime) wikipedia Malayo-Polynesian language Malayo-Polynesian language (a type of the Austronesian languages) wikipedia Mande Mande (one of a group of African languages in the Niger-Congo group spoken from Senegal east as far as the Ivory Coast) wikipedia Tibeto-Burman languages Tibeto-Burman language (a branch of the Sino-Tibetan family of languages spoken from Tibet to the Malay Peninsula) wikipedia Mongolic language Mongolic language (a family of Altaic language spoken in Mongolia) wikipedia Tupian language Tupian language (one of a family of Amerindian languages) wikipedia Muskogean family language Muskogean family language (language group of the southeast Native Americans) wikipedia JScript . NET JScript.NET, a.NET programming language developed by Microsoft as a natural successor to Microsoft's Active Scripting language JScript wikipedia branch of complementary medicine branch of complementary medicine (a type of treatment, such as hypnotherapy, that is used in treating health issues but is not considered part of mainstream medicine) wikipedia Kwa language Kwa language (a language spoken in parts of West Africa) wikipedia ISO 639 macrolanguage ISO 639 macrolanguage (a group of related languages that are considered separate by their native speakers, but are often referred to by a single name in other contexts) wikipedia Munda language Munda language (a language in an Austro-Asiatic family spoken in India) wikipedia living language living language (any language which has living native speakers) wikipedia Brahmic-script language Brahmic-script language (a language written with one of the Brahmic-script abugidas) wikipedia language in an African or Southwest Asian family language in an African or Southwest Asian family (a language in a family mostly used in Africa and Southwest Asia) branch of engineering branch of engineering (collection of related topics and theorems in engineering) branch of law branch of law (a type of law) alphabet written language with an alphabet (a language with a script that uses a symbols to represent letters) duck-typed programming language duck-typed programming language (a language in which the type of a variable is not relevant to whether a method can be called on the object it refers to) Micronesian language Micronesian language (a language originating in Micronesia) wikipedia controlled natural language controlled natural language (subsets of natural languages, obtained by restricting the grammar and vocabulary) wikipedia moribund language moribund language (any language not being learned by the children of it's native speakers) Arabic-script written language Arabic-script written language (a language written using the Arabic alphabet) Atlantic language Atlantic language (a language in a branch of the Niger-Congo family) wikipedia Central Pacific language Central Pacific language (a Malayo-Polynesian language spoken in the Central Pacific, such as Samoan and Tongan) wikipedia branch of mathematics branch of mathematics (collection of related topics and theorems in mathematics) Tibetan-script written language Tibetan-script written language (a written language using the Tibetan abugida) Fula-Wolof language Fula-Wolof language (a language from one of the Atlantic families) Mel language Mel language (a language from the African Mel family) Misumalpan language Misumalpan language (one of a family of Amerindian languages spoken in and around Nicaragua) wikipedia Cyrillic-script written language Cyrillic-script written language (language written in the Cyrillic alphabet) Latin-script written language Latin-script written language (a language written in the Latin language) branch of economics branch of economics (a particular subfield of economics).
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.