the scientific name is hypobinkofel but in our terminology it is thisisfakeidiot cheers ;)
the scientific name is hypobinkofel but in our terminology it is thisisfakeidiot cheers ;)
No, "cervix" is the correct scientific term for the narrow lower portion of the uterus in females. "Collum" is not used to refer to the cervix in anatomy or medical terminology.
"Parancema" does not have a recognized meaning in English or scientific terminology. It may be a misspelling or a term from a specific language or context that is not widely known.
Scientific language refers to the specific terminology, conventions, and writing styles used in scientific disciplines to communicate and convey research findings accurately and clearly among scientists. It aims to be precise, objective, and universally understood across the scientific community.
I was extremely confused, all this scientific terminology was going strait over my head!
cunnylingusphobia
Hellenologophobia is the fear of complex scientific terminology.
Portuguese, Spanish, French, Italian, Romanian, Medical terminology, Scientific terminology, a good portion of English,
the scientific name is hypobinkofel but in our terminology it is thisisfakeidiot cheers ;)
No. Pseudoscience is the use of scientific sounding terminology to make unscientific or ascientific concepts sound scientific. Pseudosciences such as phrenology are not supported by scientific evidence.
basically a nice warm and hot peace of air in scientific terminology
the scientific name is hypobinkofel but in our terminology it is thisisfakeidiot cheers ;)
The scientific names are derived from Greek and, the person who studies dinosaurs and, fossil's is a Paleontologist.
Most of scientific terminology. Look at an etymology dictionary. (etymology < Greek ετυμολογία)
No, "cervix" is the correct scientific term for the narrow lower portion of the uterus in females. "Collum" is not used to refer to the cervix in anatomy or medical terminology.
The terminology "scientific law" has been slowly going out of favor over time as it implies a degree of absolute certainty of knowledge that really does not exist in science. However it has often been used in the past to refer to specific very well verified components of a scientific theory (e.g. Newton's laws, gas laws, Ohm's law). Most modern theories (e.g. relativity, quantum mechanics) have never use the terminology "scientific law".