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Chlorpromazine
Chlorpromazine was the first antipsychotic medication, used during the 1950s and 1960s. Used as chlorpromazine hydrochloride and sold under the tradenames Largactil and Thorazine, it has sedative, hypotension and antiemetic properties as well as anticholinergic and antidopaminergic effects.
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Chlorpyrifos
Chlorpyrifos is a toxic crystalline organophosphate insecticide that inhibits acetylcholinesterase and is used to control insect pests. Trade names include Dursban, Empire, Eradex, Lorsban, and Stipend.
Its chemical name is O,O-diethyl O-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothioate.
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Chlortetracycline
Chlortetracycline is the first Tetracycline antibiotics antibiotic to be discovered. It was discovered in 1945 by Dr Benjamin Duggar in a soil sample from Sanborn fields, yielding an actinomycete, Streptomyces aureofaciens.
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Chock
Chock has a Fantasy World
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
Primero Junta Tus Manos
Despues Sube tus hombros
hABRE LO MAS QUE PUEDAS TU QUIJADA
Y
Disfruta el mundo de las fantasias
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Chocolate
Chocolate comprises a number of raw and processed foods that originate from the bean of the the tropical cacao tree. It is a common ingredient in many kinds of sweets, chocolate candy, ice creams, cookies, cakes, pies, and desserts. It is one of the most popular flavors in the world.
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Chocolate cake
Chocolate cake is a common dessert cake served at many gatherings such as birthday parties and weddings, that contains chocolate. There are many different types of chocolate cake depending on the alteration of the ingredients and chocolate flavoring. Some alterations include adding extra flavorings, different chocolate, and many more things.
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Chocolate chip cookie
A chocolate chip cookie is a type of cookie originating in the United States. As its name implies, it is characterized by the inclusion of chocolate chips, but beyond that defining characteristic, there is a great deal of variation within this kind of cookie.
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Chocolate egg
A chocolate egg is a confectionery made primarily of chocolate. They are most often associated in a non-religious way with Easter, Easter Bunny and Easter Egg
Cadbury chocolate eggs
Chocolate eggs are often eaten during Easter Sunday. They can be filled with crme, caramel, or just chocolate.
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Chocolate milk
Chocolate milk is a drink concocted from milk, cocoa, sweeteners, and sometimes other ingredients including starch, salt, carrageenan, vanilla, and artificial flavoring. This mixture should be stored at 0.5 to 4 celsius.
At home, chocolate milk can also be prepared by stirring a commercial chocolate syrup or powder into milk, for immediate consumption.
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Chocolate pudding
Chocolate pudding is a class of dessert with chocolate flavors. There are two main types: a boiled then chilled, textually a custard set with starch, version commonly eaten in the United States, Canada, and East Asia and South East Asia; and a steamed/baked, textually similar to cake, version that is popular in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand.
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Chocolate truffle
Chocolate truffles are a group of chocolate confectionery, traditionally made with a chocolate ganache center coated in chocolate or cocoa powder, usually in a spherical or curved shape. Other fillings may replace the ganache: cream, melted chocolate, caramel, nuts, almonds, berries or other assorted sweet fruits, nougat, fudge or toffee, mint, chocolate chips, marshmallow and popularly liquor.
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Choctaw
The Choctaws, or Chatas, are a Native Americans in the United States people originally from the southeast United States of the Muskogean languages group. In the 19th century, they were known as one of the "Five Civilized Tribes," because they had integrated a number of cultural and technological practices of their European American neighbors.
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Choir
A choir or chorus is a musical ensemble of singers.
A vocal ensemble which sings in a church, or sings exclusively sacred music, is called a choir, whereas an ensemble which performs the non-solo parts of an opera or musical theatre production is called a chorus.
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Chokecherry
The Chokecherry is a species of bird cherry native to North America, where it is found almost throughout the continent except for the deep south and the far north. It is a suckering shrub or small tree growing to 5 m tall. The leaf are oval, 3-10 cm long, with a coarsely serrated margin.
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Chokehold
A chokehold or stranglehold is a grappling hold that strangling the opponent, and leads to unconsciousness or even death when held for a considerable amount of time. Chokeholds are practiced and used in martial arts, combat sports, self-defense, law-enforcement and in military hand to hand combat application.
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Choker
A choker is a tight-fitting necklace, worn high on the neck. This type of jewelry can consist of one or more bands circling the neck. Chokers can be made of a variety of materials, including velvet, beads, metal and leather. They may or may not be adorned with sequins, studs or some kind of pendant and come in a variety of colours.
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Cholecystectomy
Cholecystectomy, plural cholecystectomies, is the surgical removal of the gallbladder. Despite the development of nonsurgical techniques, it is the most common method for treating symptomatic gallstones, although there are other reasons for having this surgery done. Each year more than 500,000 Americans have gallbladder surgery.
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Cholecystitis
Cholecystitis is inflammation of the gallbladder. It is commonly due to impaction of a gallstone within the neck of the gall bladder, leading to inspissation of bile, bile stasis, and infection by gut organisms. Cholecystitis may be a cause of right upper quadrant pain.
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Cholera
Cholera is a water-borne disease caused by the bacterium Vibrio cholerae, which is typically ingested by drinking contaminated water, or by eating improperly cooked fish, especially shellfish. It was first described in a scientific manner by the Portugal physician Garcia de Orta in Colquios dos Simples e Drogas da India .
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Cholesterol
Cholesterol is a sterol and a lipid found in the cell membranes of all human body tissues, and transported in the blood plasma of all animals. Lesser amounts of cholesterol are also found in plant membranes. The name originates from the Greek chole- and stereos , and the chemical suffix -ol for an alcohol, as researchers first identified cholesterol in solid form in gallstones in 1784.
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Cholic acid
Cholic acid is a bile acid, a white crystalline substance insoluble in water, with a melting point of 200-201 C. Salts of cholic acid are called cholates. Cholic acid is one of the four main acids produced by the liver where it is synthesized from cholesterol. It is soluble in ethanol and acetic acid.
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Choline
Choline is a nutrient, essential for cardiovascular and brain function, and for cellular membrane composition and repair.
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Cholinesterase
In biochemistry, cholinesterase is a term which refers to one of the two enzymes:
*Acetylcholinesterase, also known as red blood cell cholinesterase, erythrocyte cholinesterase, or acetylcholine acetylhydrolase, found primarily in the blood and neural synapses
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Chomp
Chomp is a 2-player game played on a rectangular "chocolate bar" made up of smaller Square blocks. The players take it in turns to choose one block and "eat it", together with those that are below it and to its right. The top left block is "poisoned" and the player who eats this loses.
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Chondrichthyes
The Chondrichthyes or cartilaginous fishes are jawed fish with paired fins, paired nostrils, scales, two-chambered hearts, and skeletons made of cartilage rather than bone. They are divided into two subclasses: Elasmobranchii and Holocephali .
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Chondrule
de:Chondren
fr:Chondrite
Most meteorites that meteorite falls on Earth are chondrites, which are characterized by the presence of round grains called chondrules. Chondrules formed as molten or partially molten droplets in space before being accretion to their parent asteroids.
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Chongqing
Chongqing is the largest and most populous of the People's Republic of China's four provinces of China-level municipality of China, and the only one in the less densely populated western half of China. The municipality of Chongqing has a registered population of 31,442,300, most of them living outside the urban area of Chongqing proper, over hundreds of square kilometres of farmland.
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Chons
In Egyptian mythology, Chons is an ancient lunar deity, from before formal structure was given to a wiktionary:pantheon. His name reflects the fact that the Moon travels across the night sky, for it means The Wanderer, and also had the titles Embracer, Pathfinder, and Defender, as he was thought to watch over night travelers.
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Chooser
The Chooser was an application program for Apple Macintosh systems using the original Mac OS. The Chooser started out as a desk accessory and became a standalone application program as of System 7. The Chooser allowed users to connect to AppleShare file servers, enable or disable the network access, and select which printer to use.
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Chopsticks
Chopsticks, a pair of small even-length tapered sticks, are the traditional eating utensils of East Asia as well as Thailand, where they are now restricted to just soup and noodles since the introduction of Western world utensils by King Rama V in the 19th century.
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Chordate
Chordates are a group of animals that includes the vertebrates, together with several closely related invertebrates. They are united by having, at some time in their life, a notochord, a hollow dorsal nerve cord, pharyngeal slits, an endostyle, and a muscular tail extending past the anus.
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Chorizo
Chorizo is term encompassing several types of pork sausage originating from the Iberian Peninsula and known as Chourio in Portugal, which have in common the use of pimentos to color them red. It can either be a fresh sausage, in which case it must be cooked, but in Europe it is more frequently a fermented cured sausage, in which case it is usually sliced and eaten without cooking.
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Choropleth map
A choropleth map is a map in which areas are shaded or patterned in proportion to the measurement of the statistical variable being displayed on the map, such as population density or per-capita income. It provides an easy way to visualize how a measurement varies across a geographic area.
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Chorus frog
The chorus frogs are a genus of frogs in the Hylidae family, and are found in North America east of the Rocky Mountains from Hudson Bay to the Gulf of Mexico.
The name of the genus comes from the Greek language pseudes and akris, probably a reference to the repeated rasping trill of most chorus frogs, which is similar to that of the insect.
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Chough
The Red-billed Chough, or just Chough, Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax is a member of the crow family, Corvidae.
It breeds in Great Britain, the Isle of Man, Ireland, southern Europe and the Mediterranean basin, the Alps, and in mountainous country across central Asia, India and China.There is an isolated population in the Ethiopian Highlands.
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Chow Chow
akcgroup = Non-sporting
| akcstd = ankcgroup = Group 7
| ankcstd = ckcgroup = Group 6 - Non-Sporting Dogs
| ckcstd = country = China
| fcigroup = 5
| fcinum = 205
| fcisection = 5
| fcistd = image = Chowchow.jpg
| image_caption = none
| kcukgroup = Utility
| kcukstd = name = Chow Chow
| nzkcgroup = Non-sporting
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Chow mein
Chow mein is an American Chinese cuisine stir-fried dish consisting of noodles, meat, and cabbage and other vegetables. It is often served as a specific dish at American Chinese cuisine restaurants with soy sauce and vegetables such as celery, bamboo shoots, and Eleocharis dulciss.
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Chowder
Chowder is any of a variety of soups, enriched with salt pork fatback and thickened with flour, or more traditionally with crushed hardtack or saltine crackers, and milk. To some Americans, it means clam chowder, made with cream or milk in most places, or with tomato as "Manhattan clam chowder." Corn chowder is a thick soup filled with whole corn kernels.
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Chris Evert
Christine Marie Evert Mill is a former World No. 1 woman tennis player from the United States. During her career, she won 18 Grand Slam singles titles, including a record 7 at the French Open. She also won 3 Grand Slam doubles titles. Evert's career win-loss record in singles matches of 1,309-146 is the best of any professional player in tennis history.
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Christchurch
Christchurch is the largest city in the South Island of New Zealand and the third largest Urban areas of New Zealand in the country. It is a coastal city, situated in the middle of the South Island's east coast just north of Banks Peninsula.
The city is named after its eponymous Christ Church, New Zealand, which is itself named after Christ Church, Oxford, a college at the University of Oxford, and simultaneously the Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford.
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Christendom
Christendom, in the widest sense, refers to Christianity as a territorial phenomenon: those countries where most people are Christians, or nominal Christians, are part of Christendom.
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Christiaan Eijkman
Christiaan Eijkman was a Netherlands physician and pathologist whose demonstration that beriberi is caused by poor diet led to the discovery of vitamins. Together with Sir Frederick Hopkins, he was awarded the 1929 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.
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Christiaan Huygens
Christiaan Huygens , was a Netherlands mathematics and physics; born in The Hague as the son of Constantijn Huygens. He studied law at the University of Leiden and the College of Orange in Breda before turning to science. Historians commonly associate Huygens with the scientific revolution.
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Christian Dior
Christian Dior, was an influential France fashion designer.
He was born in Granville, Normandy, France, heir to a fertilizer fortune.
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Christian theology
Christian theology practices theology from a Christian viewpoint or studies Christianity theologically. Given the overwhelming influence exercised by Christianity, especially in pre-modern Europe, Christian theology permeates much of Western culture culture and often reflects that culture.
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Christianity
Christianity is a Monotheism#Christian view religion centered on Jesus, and on his life and teachings as presented in the New Testament. Christians believe Jesus to be the Messiah and Incarnation and thus refer to him as Jesus Christ.
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Christianization
this is complete bull shit christianism iscomplete bull shitThe historical phenomenon of Christianization, the religious conversion of individuals to Christianity or the conversion of entire peoples at once, also includes the practice of converting Paganism practices, pagan religious imagery, pagan sites and the pagan calendar to Christian uses.
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Christmas
Christmas is a holiday on the Christian calendar, celebrating the birth of Jesus. Among those using the Gregorian calendar, it is observed on December 25. Eastern Christianity, celebrate on December 25 on the Julian calendar, which currently is January 7 on the Gregorian calendar.
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Christmas cake
Christmas cake is a type of fruitcake served at Christmas time in the United Kingdom, Ireland and many Commonwealth of Nations countries.
A Christmas cake may be light or dark, crumbly-moist to sticky-wet, spongy to heavy, leavened or unleavened, shaped round, square or oblong as whole cakes, cupcakes, or petit fours, with icing, icing, glazing, dusting with confectioner's sugar, or plain, etc.
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Christmas card
A Christmas card is a greeting card that is decorated in a manner that celebrates Christmas. Typical content ranges from truly Christianity symbols such as Nativity scenes and the Star of Bethlehem to purely secular references, sometimes humorous, to seasonal weather or common Christmastime activities like shopping and partying.
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Christmas carol
A Christmas carol is a Carol whose lyrics are on the theme of Christmas, or the winter season in general. They are traditionally sung in the period before and during Christmas. The tradition of Christmas carols hails back as far as the thirteenth century, although carols were originally communal songs sung during celebrations like harvest tide as well as Christmas.
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Christmas Eve
Christmas Eve, December 24, the day before Christmas Day, is treated to a greater or a lesser extent in most Christian societies as part of the Christmas festivities. Christmas Eve is the traditional day to set up the Christmas tree, but as the Christmas season has been extended several weeks back, many trees will have been set up for weeks.
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Christmas pudding
Christmas pudding is the dessert traditionally served on Christmas day in Britain and Ireland, as well as in some Commonwealth of Nations countries. It has its origins in England, and is sometimes known as plum pudding, though this can also refer to other kinds of boiled pudding involving a lot of dried fruit.
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Christmas stocking
A Christmas stocking is an empty sock or sock-shaped bag that children in the United States and some other cultures hang on Christmas Eve so that Santa Claus can fill it with small toys, candy, fruit, coins, or other small gifts when he arrives. These small items are often referred to as stocking stuffers or stocking fillers.
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Christmas tree
A Christmas tree is one of the most popular traditions associated with the celebration of Christmas. It is normally an evergreen Pinophyta tree that is brought into a home or used in the open, and is decorated with Christmas lights and colourful Christmas ornaments during the days around Christmas.
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Christology
Christology is that part of Christian theology which studies and attempts to define Jesus the Christ. This area of study is generally less concerned with the minor details of his life; rather it deals with issues such as his nature, the Incarnation , and the major events of his life .
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Christopher Columbus
Christopher Columbus Italian language Cristoforo Colombo; Spanish language: Cristbal Coln was a navigator and an admiral for the Crown of Castile whose transatlantic voyages opened the Americas to Europe exploration and European colonization of the Americas.
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Christopher Isherwood
Christopher Isherwood was an Anglo-American novelist. The son of landed gentry, he was born in the ancestral seat of his family, Wybersley Hall, High Lane, near Stockport in the northwest of England. His army officer father was killed in the First World War.
At school he met W. H. Auden, who became his lifelong friend.
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Christopher Marlowe
Disambiguation: Marlowe is also a 1969 movie about Raymond Chandler's detective Philip Marlowe starring James Garner and Bruce Lee.
Christopher Marlowe was an England dramatist, poet, and translator of the Elizabethan era. Perhaps the foremost Elizabethan tragedian before Shakespeare, he is known for his magnificent blank verse, his overreaching protagonists, and his own untimely death.
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Chromate
Chromates and dichromates are salts of chromic acid and dichromic acid, respectively. Chromate salts contain the chromate ion, CrO42−, and have an intense yellow color. Dichromate salts contain the dichromate ion, Cr2O72−, and have an intense orange color.
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Chromatic aberration
In optics, chromatic aberration is caused by a lens having a different refractive index for different wavelengths of light . The term "purple fringing" is commonly used in photography, although not all purple fringing can be attributed to chromatic aberration.
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Chromatic scale
The chromatic scale is the scale that contains all twelve Pitch es of the Western equal temperament scale.
All of the other scales in traditional Western music are subsets of this scale. Each pitch is separated from its upper and lower neighbors by the interval of one half step, or semitone.
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Chromatin
Chromatin is a complex of DNA and protein found inside the cell nucleus of Eukaryote cell . The nucleic acids are generally in the form of double-stranded DNA . The major proteins involved in chromatin are histone proteins, but other chromosomal proteins are prominent too.
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Chromatography
Chromatography is the collective term for a family of laboratory techniques for the separation of mixtures. It involves passing a mixture which contains the analyte through a stationary phase, which separates it from other molecules in the mixture and allows it to be isolated.
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Chromic acid
In chemistry, chromic acid is a hypothetical chromium chemical compound, yet to be isolated, that would have the chemical formula H2CrO4. There is a related acid, also yet to be isolated called dichromic acid with the formula H2Cr2O7.
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Chromite
Chromite, iron magnesium chromium oxide:Cr2O4, is an oxide mineral belonging to the spinel group. Magnesium is always present in variable amounts, also aluminium and iron substitute for chromium.
Chromite is found in peridotite and other layered ultramafic intrusive rocks and also found in metamorphic rocks such as serpentinites.
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Chromium
Chromium is a chemical element in the periodic table that has the symbol Cr and atomic number 24.
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Chromoblastomycosis
Chromoblastomycosis is a long-term mycosis of the skin and subcutaneous tissue. The infection occurs most commonly in tropical or subtropical climates, often in rural areas. It can be caused by many different type of fungi which become implanted under the skin, often by thorns or splinters.
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Chromosome
A chromosome is a large macromolecule into which DNA is normally packaged in a Cell . Minimally, it is a very long, continuous piece of DNA , which contains many genes, regulatory sequence and other intervening genetic sequence.
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Chromosphere
The chromosphere is a thin layer of the Sun's celestial body's atmosphere just above the photosphere, roughly 10,000 kilometers deep . The chromosphere is more visually transparent than the photosphere.
Without special equipment the Sun's chromosphere cannot be seen due to its being washed out by the overwhelming brightness of the photosphere, but its reddish colour can be seen during a total Solar eclipse or in filtered light such as H-alpha.
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