Examples of lower rabbus in the following topics:
-
- The term lower rabbus is used colloquially in the UK to describe this structure.
-
- The lower class consists of those at the bottom of the socioeconomic hierarchy who have low education, low income, and low status jobs.
- Store cashiers, seasonal farmhands, and tollbooth operators may all be considered members of the lower class.
- The lower class in the United States refers to individuals who are at, or near, the lower end of the socioeconomic hierarchy.
- Those who are employed in lower class occupations are often colloquially referred to as the working poor.
- For all of these reasons, lower class households are the most economically vulnerable in the United States.
-
- The deep veins of the lower extremity have valves for unidirectional flow and accompany the arteries and their branches.
- The popliteal vein, shown here in blue, extends from the hip to the knee and helps drain blood from the lower extremities.
- The great saphenous vein and its tributaries, shown in blue, drain blood from the lower limbs.
- Outline the flow of blood in the veins of the lower limbs
-
- The lower-middle class are those with some education and comfortable salaries, but with socioeconomic statuses below the upper-middle class.
- Primary school teachers are examples of members of the lower-middle class.
- In American society, the middle class is often divided into the lower-middle class and upper-middle class.
- Lower-middle class individuals commonly have some college education or a bachelor's degree and earn a comfortable living.
- Primary school teachers are generally considered lower-middle class.
-
- FIFO: (+) Higher value of inventory (-) Lower cost of goods sold
- LIFO: (-) Lower value of inventory (+) Higher cost of goods sold
- FIFO: (-) Lower value of inventory (+) Higher cost of goods sold
- Using LIFO accounting for inventory, a company generally reports lower net income and lower book value, due to the effects of inflation.
- This generally results in lower taxation.
-
- There are upper and lower motor neurons in the corticospinal tract.
- These axons synapse with lower motor neurons in the ventral horns of all levels of the spinal cord.
- These axons also synapse with lower motor neurons in the ventral horns.
- The ventromedial lower motor neurons control the large, postural muscles of the axial skeleton.
- The pyramidal tract is visible in red, and pyramidal decussation is labeled at lower right.
-
- The brachial plexus is formed by the four lower cervical spinal nerves and the first thoracic spinal nerve.
- The brachial plexus is a network of nerve fibers that run from the spine that are formed by the ventral rami of the lower four cervical and first thoracic nerve roots (C5–C8, T1).
- These roots merge to form three trunks: The superior or upper (C5–C6), the middle (C7), and the inferior or lower (C8, T1).
- Each trunk then splits in two, to form six divisions: The anterior divisions of the upper, middle, and lower trunks and the posterior divisions of the upper, middle, and lower trunks.
- The medial cord is simply a continuation of the anterior division of the lower trunk (C8, T1).
-
- For example, the U.S. government bonds have a lower risk of default and higher liquidity than municipal bonds, whereas municipal bonds are the state and local government bonds.
- However, the interest rates of municipal bonds are consistently lower than U.S. government bonds for the last 50 years because investors do not pay U.S. taxes on the interest they earn on municipal bonds while they pay U.S. government taxes on U.S. government securities.
- If you bought municipal bonds, subsequently, you would earn a lower interest than U.S. government securities.
- Nevertheless, you pay no taxes, compensating you for the greater risk and lower liquidity.
- Therefore, municipal bonds have a lower interest rate than U.S. government bonds.
-
- Enzymes are proteins that accelerate biochemical transformations by lowering the activation energy of reactions.
- Enzymes are proteins that are able to lower the activation energy for various biochemical reactions.
- At the active site, the substrate(s) can form an activated complex at lower energy.
- This change stabilizes the transition state complex, and thus lowers the activation energy.
- Covalent catalysis: covalent bonding to side chains or cofactors can lower the energy of the transition state.
-
- The tibia and the smaller fibula bones comprise the lower leg and articulate at the knee and ankle.
- The tibia and fibula are the two bones of
the lower leg.
- The tibia, or shin bone, spans the lower
leg, articulating proximally with the femur and patella at the knee joint, and
distally with the tarsal bones, to form the ankle joint.
- It is the major weight-bearing bone of the lower leg.
- The fibula also spans the lower leg, although
proximally it does not articulate with the femur or patella.