Sure thing, honey. An identifying relationship of a weak entity type can definitely have a degree greater than two. For example, let's say we have a weak entity type called "Order Item" that depends on both "Order" and "Product" entities to uniquely identify it. In this case, the identifying relationship would have a degree of two (connecting "Order" and "Product") but the weak entity type itself would have a degree of three. Hope that clears things up for ya!
You can do many things with a degree of associated of applied science. You can teach in museums for example.
the correlational method.
In general, the greater the degree of undercooling of a liquid melt, the smaller the critical radius of the nuclei formed.
The degrees (temperature) from the saturated liquid line. One example would be after refrigerant goes through a condenser. T_subcooling = T_sat - T_condenser
I have a degree in forensic psychology.He turned a ninety degree angle.
Relationship between Lorenz curve and Gini coefficient is the more the Lorenz line curves away from the line of equality, the greater the degree of inequality represented.
The first degree of affinity refers to a relationship between one spouse and the blood relatives of the other spouse. For example, a person's spouse's parents would be considered in the first degree of affinity to that person.
The degree of the polynomial.
five
Yes, it's perfectly fine. Your identifying the degree type, and the specialty within that degree type.
An increase in temperature of one degree Celsius is greater than an increase in temperature of one degree Fahrenheit. This is because the Celsius scale has a larger degree increment than the Fahrenheit scale.
Yes
GREATER
I'm not entirely sure; I've never heard this saying before. But I imagine that it's like burns. If a relationship is 'first degree' it's easily healed if broken off and doesn't mean much. A second degree relationship is a burn you wouldn't want to get, though.
No, a degree Celsius is not greater in value than a degree Fahrenheit. In fact, both temperature scales have different zero points and do not equate at the same value.
A Degree When You're College :)))
No. "Quadratic" means degree of 2.