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Daily High School Practice


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[Front]


Romans 1:1
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Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an Apostle, set apart to preach the Gospel of God

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Romans 1:1
Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an Apostle, set apart to preach the Gospel of God
Romans 1:2
(which He had promised before by His Prophets in the Holy Scriptures);
Romans 1:3
Concerning His Son Jesus Christ, our Lord (Who was made from the seed of David, according to the flesh,
Romans 1:4
And declared mightily to be the Son of God, touching the Spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead);
Romans 1:5
By Whom we have received grace and Apostleship (that obedience might be given unto the faith) for His Name, among all the Gentiles.
Romans 1:6
Among whom you are also called by Jesus Christ.
Romans 1:7
To all at Rome; beloved of God, called to be Saints: Grace to you, and peace, from God our Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ.
Romans 1:8
First, I thank my God, through Jesus Christ, for you all, because your faith is proclaimed throughout the whole world.
Romans 1:9
For God is my witness (Whom I serve in my spirit in the Gospel of His Son) that without ceasing I make mention of you.
Romans 1:10
Always imploring in my prayers that by some means, at one time or other, I might have a prosperous journey, by the will of God, to come to you.
Romans 2:1
Therefore, you are without excuse, O man, whoever you are who judges! For in whatever you judge another, you judge yourself. For you who judge do the same things.
Romans 2:2
But we know that the judgment of God is according to truth, against those who commit such things.
Romans 2:3
And do you think, O man - who judges those who do such things and yet does the same - that you shall escape the judgment of God?
Romans 2:4
Or do you think so little of the riches of His bountifulness and patience and long suffering, not knowing that the bountifulness of God leads you to repentance?
Romans 2:5
But you, because of your hardness and unrepentant heart, are laying up a treasure of wrath for yourself on the Day of wrath and revelation of the just judgment of God,
Romans 2:6
Who will reward everyone according to his works.
Romans 2:7
Indeed those who, through patience in well-doing, seek glory and honor and immortality (everlasting life).
Romans 2:8
But to those who are contentious, and disobey the truth, and obey unrighteousness, shall be indignation and wrath.
Romans 2:9
Tribulation and anguish shall be upon the soul of every man who does evil –the Jew first, and also the Greek.
Romans 2:10
But glory and honor and peace shall be to everyone who does good - to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.
Order of operations for solving equations
1) Parentheses 2) Exponents 3) Multiplication 4) Division 5) Addition 6) Subtraction
Endpoint
Starting point or origin of a ray
Collinear
Contained in the same line
One-dimensional
Having length, but no width
Line
An infinite number of connected points
Adjacent Angles
Share a common side, and have the same origin
Vertical Angles
Share a common origin and are opposite each other, and are congruent.
Supplementary Angles
Their measures add up to 180°; they make a straight angle.
Complementary Angles
Add up to 90°, and make a right angle
Displacement
The change in an object's position.
Vector quantity
A physical measurement that contains directional information
Scalar quantity
A physical measurement that does not contain directional information
Velocity
The time rate of change of an object's position
Speed
The time rate of change of the distance traveled by an object
Instantaneous Velocity
The velocity of an object at one moment in time.
Average Velocity
The velocity of an object over an extended period of time.
Acceleration
The time rate of change of an object's velocity.
2 conditions that must be met in order to use equations for one dimensional motion
1. Acceleration must be constant. 2. Motion must be in one direction.
9.8m/sec^2
The gravitational acceleration of objects near the earth's surface.
The more that air resistance affects an object,...
The smaller its terminal velocity will be.
Free fall
The motion of an object when it is falling solely under the influence of gravity.
Terminal velocity
The velocity a falling object has when, due to air resistance, its acceleration is reduced to zero. This is the maximum velocity a falling object subject to air resistance can achieve.
Johan Mendel
The father of modern genetics
True breading
If an organism has a certain characteristic that is always passed on to its offspring, we say that this organism bred true with respect to that characteristic.
Genotype
Two-letter set that represents the alleles an organism possesses for a certain trait.
Phenotype
The observable expression of an organism's genes
Homozygous Genotype
A genotype in which both alleles are identical
Heterozygous Genotype
A genotype with two different alleles
Dominant allele
An allele that will determine the phenotype if just one is present in the genotype
Recessive allele
The allele that will not determine the phenotype unless the genotype is homozygous in that allele
Mendel's First Principle of Genetics
The traits of an organism are determined by its genes.
Mendel's Second Principle of Genetics
Each organism has two alleles that make up the genotype for a given trait.
Mendel's Third Principle of Genetics
In sexual reproduction, each parent contributes only one of its alleles to its offspring.
Mendel's Fourth Principle of Genetics
In each genotype, there is a dominant allele. If it exists in an organism, the phenotype is determined by that allele.
Pedigree
A diagram that follows a particular phenotype through several generations.
Antigen
A protein that, when introduced in the blood, triggers the production of an antibody.
Autosomal inheritance
Inheritance of a genetic trait not on a sex chromosome
Sex-linked Inheritance
Inheritance of a genetic trait located on the sex chromosome
Mutation
A radical chemical change in one or more alleles
Change in Chromosome structure
A situation in which a chromosome loses or gains genes during meiosis.
Change in Chromosome number
A situation in which abnormal cellular events in meiosis lead to either none of a particular chromosome in the gamete or more than one chromosome in the gamete.
Atoms
The smallest parts of matter
Molecules
Contain at least two atoms chemically combined together in a simple ratio.
Compound
A substance which contains different elements combined in a simple ratio.
Mixture
A combination of compounds which can be separated by physical methods.
Speech
Communication or expression of thoughts in spoken words.
Parts of Speech
The classification of words, to one of which every word must belong.
The Eight Parts of Speech
1. Nouns 2. Pronouns 3. Verbs 4. Adjectives 5. Adverbs 6. Prepositions 7. Conjunctions 8. Interjections
Nouns
Words that name a person, place thing, idea, or quality
Pronouns
Words that are used in the place of nouns
Verbs
Words that express action or a state of being or that help other verbs complete their meaning
Adjectives
Words that modify (describe or limit) nouns or pronouns
Adverbs
Words that modify (describe or limit) verbs, adjectives, or other adverbs
Prepositions
Words used to show the relationship of a noun or pronoun to some other words in a sentence
Conjunctions
Words that connect words or groups of words
Interjections
Words that exclaim or express strong feelings or surprise but have little or no grammatical connection with other words in a sentence
The two types of nouns
Common, and Proper
Proper nouns
Name a particular person, place, or thing, and always begin with a capital letter.
Six different uses of nouns
Subjects, direct objects, indirect objects, objects of prepositions, predicate nominatives, and appositives
Subject
The subject of a sentence is the word or group of words about which the sentence makes a statement
Direct object
A direct object is a word or group of words that receives the action of a verb.
Indirect object
An indirect object precedes a direct object and indicates to whom or for whom the action of the verb is done.
Object of a Preposition
An object of a preposition is a word or group of words following a preposition. The preposition relates its object so some other word or words in the sentence.
Predicate Nominative
A predicate nominative is a word or group of words following a linking verb and renaming the subject of a sentence or clause.
Appositive
An appositive I a word that follows a nominative (noun, pronoun, or noun-like group of words) and that renames or identifies the first nominative.
The eight types of pronouns
Personal, personal-possessive, indefinite, relative, demonstrative, interrogative, reciprocal and compound reflexive & intensive.
Personal pronoun
Refers to individuals in the same way that a noun is used.
Personal-possessive pronouns
Indicates possession; is used in the same way that an adjective is used.
Indefinite pronouns
Does not refer to any particular antecedent (a noun or pronoun to which a pronoun refers).
Relative pronouns
Connects or "relates" adjective clauses to the rest of the sentence.
Demonstrative pronouns
Points out and identifies persons or things.
Reciprocal pronouns
Indicates an interchange of action suggested by a verb.
Compound Reflexive pronouns
"Self" pronoun; follows verbs or prepositions and "reflects" back to the subject.
Compound Intensive pronouns
"Self" pronouns; is used as an appositive and "intensifies" or emphasises the noun or pronoun that it follows.
Compound Intensive pronouns
"Self" pronouns; is used as an appositive and "intensifies" or emphasises the noun or pronoun that it follows.
The Law of Conservation of Matter
Matter cannot be created or destroyed in a chemical reaction.
The Law of Constant Composition
A compound always contains the same elements combined together in the same proportion by mass.
Is it possible for the chemical composition of a compound to change?
No, the chemical composition of a compound cannot change.
The Law of Multiple Proportions
If two elements "A" and "B" combine together to form more than one compound, then the different masses of "A" which combine with a fixed mass of "B" are in a simple ratio.