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Look up: Vector

  1. Vector
    an organism that transmits a disease-causing pathogen.
    Found on http://www.hcs.ohio-state.edu/mg/manual/

  2. Vector
    (Latin) a carrier, one who bears; can also be a passenger or rider.
    Found on http://ablemedia.com/ctcweb/glossary/glo

  3. Vector
    A one-dimensional array of numbers that can be used to represent a point in a multidimensional space.
    Found on http://mitpress.mit.edu/books/FLAOH/cbnh

  4. Vector
    1. An organism, often an insect or rodent, that carries disease. 2. Plasmids, viruses, or bacteria used to transport genes into a host cell. A gene is placed in the vector; the vector then "infects" the bacterium.
    Found on http://www.epa.gov/OCEPAterms/

  5. Vector
    An autonomously replicating DNA molecule into which foreign DNA fragments are inserted and then propagated in a host cell. Also living carriers of genetic material (such as pollen) from plant to plant, such as insects.
    Found on http://filebox.vt.edu/cals/cses/chagedor

  6. vector
    An living agent that transmits a pathogen from an infected plant to an uninfected one.
    Found on http://ppathw3.cals.cornell.edu/glossary

  7. Vector
    Literally 'a carrier'. An animal carrying a micro-organism pathogenic for members of another species; the vector may or may not be essential for the completion of the life cycle of the pathogenic micro-organism. Also, the vehicle for cloning, typically a DNA molecule (plasmid or bacterophage DNA) capable of self-replication in a host organism.
    Found on http://www.pestmanagement.co.uk/lib/glos

  8. Vector
    A straight line joining two data points.
    Found on http://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/oswebsit

  9. vector
    [n] - a straight line segment whose length is magnitude and whose orientation in space is direction 2. [n] - any agent (person or animal or microorganism) that carries and transmits a disease 3. [n] - a variable quantity that can be resolved into components
    Found on http://www.webdictionary.co.uk/definitio

  10. Vector
    A quantity with a magnitude and a direction. Vectors are added like arrows, end to end, and the sum (for two) is the vector from the tail of the first vector to the tip of the second.There are a number of different representations. Given the vector A it is normal to print it in bold or it can be expressed as follows: are unit vectorsIf x1
    Found on http://www.diracdelta.co.uk/science/sour

  11. Vector
    Resolution and device independent mathematical descriptions of shapes. Made up of primitives, vector images require much less storage space and memory than bitmaps - file size for a vector image the size of a business card will be pretty much the same for the same image on a billboard. They don't distort when resized like bitmaps, can be infinitely…
    Found on http://www.britishprint.com/tw/glossary.

  12. vector
    1. (mathematics) A member of a vector space. 2. (graphics) A line or movement defined by its end points, or by the current position and one other point. See vector graphics. 3. (operating system) A memory location containing the address of some code, often some kind of exception handler or other operating system service. By changing the vector to…
    Found on

  13. Vector
    Vector: In medicine, a vector is a carrier. The best way to understand a vector is to recall its origin as a word. Vector is the Latin word for a "bearer." In parasitology (the study of parasitic organisms), the vector carries the parasitic agent. For example, in malaria a mosquito serves as the vector that carries and transfers the infectious agen …
    Found on http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.

  14. vector
    a) a one-dimensional array; b) a quantity usually characterised by an ordered set of scalars Category: Automation (includes telecommunications and computers) • any agent,particularly animals(and typically insects)but also seed,wind,and water,capable of transplanting a pathogen to a host Category: Botany and zoology • a quantity,such as a force,that has direction and magnitu…
    Found on http://www.mijnwoordenboek.nl/definition

  15. Vector
    (i) Any agent (living or otherwise) that acts as a carrier for a pathogenic organism and transmits it to a susceptible host. (ii) A physical quantity with a direction as well as a strength.
    Found on http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/Towns

  16. Vector
    An electronic or computer-readable image format incorporating a formulate representation of graphical line art. Vector format is used during the markup process, to keep redlines separate from images and to facilitate easy modifications. This format is also often used during the edit process.
    Found on http://www.rodsmith.org.uk/photographic%

  17. Vector
    Definition (keystage 3) In elementary maths, a vector is a quantity which has both size and direction. For instance the wind might be measured by a vector, since it has both speed and direction. <br /> Sometimes it is helpful to think of a vector as a directed line segment. <br /> At a higher level we define a vector as a member of a se …
    Found on http://thesaurus.maths.org/mmkb/entry.ht

  18. Vector
    Definition (undergraduate level) An element of a vector space.
    Found on http://thesaurus.maths.org/mmkb/entry.ht

  19. vector
    (1) Mathematical term to describe something that has both direction and magnitude. (2) Common term for a plasmid that can be used to transfer DNA sequences from one organism to another. See transfection. Different vectors may have properties particularly appropriate to give protein expression in the recipient, or for cloning, or may have different selectable markers.
    Found on

  20. Vector
    Vec"tor noun [ Latin , a bearer, carrier. from vehere , vectum , to carry.] 1. Same as Radius vector . 2. (Math.) A directed quantity, as a straight line, a force, or a velocity. Vectors are said to be equal when their directions are the same their magnitudes equal. Confer Scalar . » In a triangle, either side is the vector sum of th …
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/webster/V/10

  21. vector
    1. <mathematics> A term to describe something that has both direction and magnitude. ... 2. <molecular biology> Commonly term for a plasmid that can be used to transfer DNA sequences from one organism to another. Different vectors may have properties particularly appropriate to give protein expression in the recipient or for cloning or m …
    Found on http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/cgi-bin/omd?v

  22. vector
    noun a variable quantity that can be resolved into components
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  23. vector
    transmitter noun any agent (person or animal or microorganism) that carries and transmits a disease; `mosquitos are vectors of malaria and yellow fever`; `fleas are vectors of the plague`; `aphids are transmitters of plant diseases`; `when medical scientists talk about vectors they are usually talking about insects`
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  24. vector
    noun a straight line segment whose length is magnitude and whose orientation in space is direction
    Found on http://wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?

  25. vector
    (vek´tәr) a carrier, especially an animal such as an arthropod that transfers an infective agent from one host to another. Examples are the mosquito that carries the malaria parasite Plasmodium between humans, and the tsetse fly that carries trypanosomes from other animals to humans. Dogs, bats, and other animals ...
    Found on http://www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns

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22 November 2008

This day in history:
On Friday, November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was shot as he rode in a motorcade through the streets of Dallas, Texas. At his death, the 35th president was 46 years old and had served less than three years in office. Despite this intimate experience of events surrounding the death of John F. Kennedy, the nation failed to achieve closure. Oswald never confessed, and the facts of the case remain mysterious. The Warren Commission's conclusion Oswald acted alone failed to satisfy the public. In 1976, the House of Representatives' Select Committee on Assassinations reopened investigation of the murder. The Committee reported that Lee Harvey Oswald probably was part of a conspiracy that may have involved organized crime. read more

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