natural object | an object occurring naturally, not made by man |
product introduction | the introduction (usually by an advertising campaign) of a new product or product line |
product development | improving an existing product or developing new kinds of products |
product research | marketing research that yields information about desired characteristics of the product or service |
natural family planning | any of several methods of family planning that do not involve sterilization or contraceptive devices or drugs, coitus is avoided during the fertile time of a woman's menstrual cycle |
natural | (craps) a first roll of or that immediately wins the stake |
by-product byproduct spin-off | a product made during the manufacture of something else |
end product output | final product, the things produced |
line product line line of products line of merchandise business line line of business | a particular kind of product or merchandise, a nice line of shoes |
merchandise ware product | commodities offered for sale, good business depends on having good merchandise, that store offers a variety of products |
product production | an artifact that has been created by someone or some process, they improve their product every year, they export most of their agricultural production |
software package software product | merchandise consisting of a computer program that is offered for sale |
natural virtue | (scholasticism) one of the four virtues (prudence, justice, fortitude, and temperance) derived from nature |
natural ability | ability that is inherited |
endowment gift talent natural endowment | natural abilities or qualities |
natural history | the scientific study of plants or animals (more observational than experimental) usually published in popular magazines rather than in academic journals |
product mathematical product | a quantity obtained by multiplication, the product of and is |
vector product cross product | a vector that is the product of two other vectors |
scalar product inner product dot product | a real number (a scalar) that is the product of two vectors |
law natural law | a rule or body of rules of conduct inherent in human nature and essential to or binding upon human society |
natural science | the sciences involved in the study of the physical world and its phenomena |
product-moment correlation coefficient Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient | the most commonly used method of computing a correlation coefficient between variables that are linearly related |
physics natural philosophy r | the science of matter and energy and their interactions, his favorite subject was physics |
natural language processing NLP human language technology | the branch of information science that deals with natural language information |
natural theology | a theology that holds that knowledge of God can be acquired by human reason without the aid of divine revelation |
bar code Universal Product Code | code consisting of a series of vertical bars of variable width that are scanned by a laser, printed on consumer product packages to identify the item for a computer that provides the price and registers inventory information |
natural language processor natural language processing application | an application program that deals with natural language text |
natural logarithm Napierian logarithm | a logarithm to the base e |
natural cancel | a notation cancelling a previous sharp or flat |
natural language tongue | a human written or spoken language used by a community, opposed to e.g. a computer language |
happening occurrence occurrent natural event | an event that happens |
foodstuff food product | a substance that can be used or prepared for use as food |
dairy product | milk and butter and cheese |
intersection product Cartesian product | the set of elements common to two or more sets, the set of red hats is the intersection of the set of hats and the set of red things |
Royal Society Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge | an honorary English society (formalized inand given a royal charter by Charles II in ) through which the British government has supported science |
covering natural covering cover | a natural object that covers or envelops, under a covering of dust, the fox was flushed from its cover |
enclosure natural enclosure | a naturally enclosed space |
natural depression depression | a sunken or depressed geological formation |
natural elevation elevation | a raised or elevated geological formation |
natural order | the physical universe considered as an orderly system subject to natural (not human or supernatural) laws |
spring fountain outflow outpouring natural spring | a natural flow of ground water |
natural | someone regarded as certain to succeed, he's a natural for the job |
naturalist natural scientist | a biologist knowledgeable about natural history (especially botany and zoology) |
natural phenomenon | all phenomena that are not artificial |
by-product byproduct | a secondary and sometimes unexpected consequence |
product | a consequence of someone's efforts or of a particular set of circumstances, skill is the product of hours of practice, his reaction was the product of hunger and fatigue |
gross national product GNP | former measure of the United States economy, the total market value of goods and services produced by all citizens and capital during a given period (usually yr) |
real gross national product real GNP | a version of the GNP that has been adjusted for the effects of inflation |
gross domestic product GDP | the measure of an economy adopted by the United States in , the total market values of goods and services produced by workers and capital within a nation's borders during a given period (usually year) |
natural resource natural resources | resources (actual and potential) supplied by nature |