Examples of primary season in the following topics:
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- The presidential general election occurs after the primary season and is the process through which a national vote chooses the president.
- In the United States, a presidential election is held every four years and includes both a primary season and a general election.
- During the primary season, the two major political parties narrow the field of candidates through state votes to nominate the party's candidate for the general election.
- In the primary season, candidates compete against other members of their party to win a majority of votes from voters within their own party.
- The presidential general election lasts from the end of the primary season, usually in June, until the vote on the first Tuesday of November.
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- The Iowa caucuses are the first nominating election to occur in the presidential primary season and, therefore, they often have a significant impact on later primaries.
- Not every election is preceded by a primary season, but most major races, such as presidential and congressional races, use primaries to narrow the field of candidates.
- The vast majority of states use primaries to nominate a candidate, but caucuses are notably used in Iowa, which is traditionally the first state to vote in the primary/caucus season.
- Since Iowa is first, it has a large impact on the primary season, as it gives one candidate from each party an advantage as they move into other state votes.
- Summarize the primary system and how a primary differs from a caucus
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- The Fed offers three discount window programs to depository institutions: primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit, each with its own interest rate.
- Seasonal credit is extended to relatively small depository institutions that have recurring intra-year fluctuations in funding needs, such as banks in agricultural or seasonal resort communities.
- The discount rate charged for primary credit (the primary credit rate) is set above the usual level of short-term market interest rates.
- The discount rate for seasonal credit is an average of selected market rates.
- Describe the Fed's primary credit, secondary credit, and seasonal credit lending programs
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- To nominate candidates, political parties hold primary elections.
- Primary elections are used to narrow the field of candidates for the general election.
- During primary campaigns, state delegates are assigned to a primary candidate based on the outcome of a statewide vote.
- Whichever primary candidate emerges from the primary election with the most delegates becomes the party's presumptive nominee.
- The presumptive nominee is not formally nominated until the national convention, but he or she is all but assured of a place on the ballot in the general election by the conclusion of the primary season.
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- Subsequent cell elongation also contributes to primary growth.
- The vascular cambium is located just outside the primary xylem and to the interior of the primary phloem.
- During the spring growing season, cells of the secondary xylem have a large internal diameter; their primary cell walls are not extensively thickened.
- This alternation of early and late wood is due largely to a seasonal decrease in the number of vessel elements and a seasonal increase in the number of tracheids.
- Seasonal changes in weather patterns can also affect the growth rate.
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- Companies can issue more shares after their initial public offering in what is called a Seasoned Equity Offering.
- However, once a company is public, it is still able to raise capital through what is called a seasoned equity offering.
- A seasoned equity offering (SEO) is a broad term that refers to any sale of shares by the company after the initial IPO.
- A SEO is the increase of the number of shares outstanding in the market in which the IPO took place, the primary market.
- Contrast a seasoned equity offering with an initial public offering and a secondary market offering
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- Tropical wet forests are characterized by high precipitation and humidity, while savannas have scattered trees and an extensive dry season.
- Compared to other forest biomes, tropical wet forests have little variation in seasonal temperatures.
- This lack of seasonality leads to year-round plant growth, rather than the seasonal (spring, summer, and fall) growth seen in other biomes.
- Tropical wet forests have high net primary productivity because the annual temperatures and precipitation values in these areas are ideal for plant growth.
- They have an extensive dry season.
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- Temperate forests are characterized by fluctuating seasonal temperatures and constant-but-moderate rainfall.
- Temperatures ranging between -30°C - 30°C (-22°F - 86°F) drop below freezing on an annual basis, resulting in defined growing seasons during the spring, summer, and early fall.
- Because of the dormant period, the net primary productivity of temperate forests is less than that of tropical wet forests.
- Deciduous trees, those that lose their leaves seasonally, are the dominant plant in the temperate forest.
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- A company working in a seasonal industry should create a plan based on historical sales data, order stock early and have more cash in hands if possible.
- Many economic phenomena have seasonal cycles, such as agricultural production and consumer consumption.
- As a result, it is necessary to treat seasonality seriously in forecasting practice for inventory control.
- A company operating in a seasonal industry should create a plan based on historical sales data and other relevant information.
- It is advisable that a company has healthy cash flow during seasonal peak so that it can order promptly and easily.
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- Phosphorous levels follow a seasonal pattern in aquatic ecosystems.
- Much of the phosphorous is then converted to organic phosphorous, and primary productivity then declines.
- As phosphorous levels begin to increase at the end of the summer, primary plants and algae begin to rapidly grow again.