The funding received from the government directly benefits programs in our community such as eduction, Head Start programs, public transportation, road rehabilitation/construction, programs for the elderly, and emergency food/shelter.
Kenneth says: well electric cars trains move fright then placed on trucks hell in India they have cars and small vans running on compressed air. and no they is no magic bullet here thats why its call R&D oh we dont need lots of wind mills,,,, theres always solar like in th edesert of Nevada. look into it you might get a eduction as well.
However, health care is not like an issue of eduction. it is about life and death. the medical cost of the nation is drowning the future of this country.
February 3rd, 2010 at 7: 51 pm glamourdammerung says: drhunt does not appear to know what the word “absent” means, which makes me question their primary school eduction.
Since The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia was last published in 1914 I think the most Mr. Foreman can claim for his 2005 contribution is a novel coinage made in ignorance that the word already had a definition.
I have access to the online version of the Oxford English Dictionary, which lists usage examples going back to at least the 1600's. Here are some of the definitions:
1. "Med. The excretion, expulsion, or removal of something from the body. Obs."
3.a. "The action of bringing out or developing something from a state of latent, rudimentary, or potential existence; an instance or result of this."
3.b. "Chem. The action of isolating a substance from a compound or mixture in which it is present; extraction. Now rare."
4. "The inferring of a principle, conclusion, etc., from premises or available data. Also: a result of this, an inference; cf. eductn. 3." (Which has "That which is inferred or elicited from something; a product or result of inference or development.")
5. "Mech a. The passage of steam, water, or vapour out of a vessel through a pipe or tube provided for the purpose; spec. (in a steam engine) the exit of steam from the cylinder after it has done its work in propelling the piston; cf. exhaustn. 1a(a) and the note there. Usu. attrib. (see Compounds). Now chiefly hist."
6. "The bringing about or occasioning of an act, event, emotion, etc. Cf. educev. 4."
itull commented on the word eduction
Frankly, this was "made up" by Alfred G. Foreman in 2005 in his blog. So where did "you" find it?
definition not good at all. Eduction is a geometry term and does NOT mean induction.
twitterbotlist does not have this word.
AND in no way refers to education!
May 10, 2017
bilby commented on the word eduction
The three sources of definitions above are clearly identified.
May 10, 2017
qms commented on the word eduction
Since The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia was last published in 1914 I think the most Mr. Foreman can claim for his 2005 contribution is a novel coinage made in ignorance that the word already had a definition.
May 10, 2017
ruzuzu commented on the word eduction
I have access to the online version of the Oxford English Dictionary, which lists usage examples going back to at least the 1600's. Here are some of the definitions:
1. "Med. The excretion, expulsion, or removal of something from the body. Obs."
3.a. "The action of bringing out or developing something from a state of latent, rudimentary, or potential existence; an instance or result of this."
3.b. "Chem. The action of isolating a substance from a compound or mixture in which it is present; extraction. Now rare."
4. "The inferring of a principle, conclusion, etc., from premises or available data. Also: a result of this, an inference; cf. educt n. 3." (Which has "That which is inferred or elicited from something; a product or result of inference or development.")
5. "Mech a. The passage of steam, water, or vapour out of a vessel through a pipe or tube provided for the purpose; spec. (in a steam engine) the exit of steam from the cylinder after it has done its work in propelling the piston; cf. exhaust n. 1a(a) and the note there. Usu. attrib. (see Compounds). Now chiefly hist."
6. "The bringing about or occasioning of an act, event, emotion, etc. Cf. educe v. 4."
May 10, 2017
ruzuzu commented on the word eduction
But most of the usage examples and tweets do seem to be typos about education.
May 10, 2017