PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: NOUN
- The steps taken in an action or other legal proceeding.
- A subroutine or function coded to perform a specific task.
- The set of established forms or methods of an organized body for accomplishing a certain task or tasks.
- A mode of conducting legal and parliamentary proceedings
- A process or series of acts especially of a practical or mechanical nature involved in a particular form of work
- A set sequence of steps, part of larger computer program
- A manner of proceeding; a way of performing or effecting something.
- A series of steps taken to accomplish an end.
- A set of instructions that performs a specific task; a subroutine or function.
- A set of established forms or methods for conducting the affairs of an organized body such as a business, club, or government.
- The set of rules under which litigation is conducted, especially in contrast to the set of substantive legal principles that determine the merits of legal controversies and disputes.
- Manner of proceeding or acting; a course or mode of action; conduct.
- A step taken; an act performed; a proceeding.
- That which proceeds from something; product.
- The modes, collectively, of conducting business, especially deliberative business; specifically, in law, the modes of conduct of litigation and judicial business, as distinguished from that branch of the law which gives or defines rights. It includes practice, pleading, and evidence.
- Synonyms Proceeding, Operation, etc. See process.
- The act or manner of proceeding or moving forward; progress; process; operation; conduct.
- That which results; issue; product.
- A particular method for performing a task.
- A series of small tasks or steps taken to accomplish an end.
- The act of proceeding or moving forward; progress.
- A particular course of action intended to achieve a result
- A natural prolongation or projection from a part of an organism either animal or plant
- (psychology) the performance of some composite cognitive activity; an operation that affects mental contents
- A mental process that you are not directly aware of
- A sustained phenomenon or one marked by gradual changes through a series of states
- A particular course of action intended to achieve a result
- A writ issued by authority of law; usually compels the defendant's attendance in a civil suit; failure to appear results in a default judgment against the defendant
- A proceeding or moving forward; progressive movement; gradual advance; continuous proceeding.
- Course; lapse; a passing or elapsing; passage, as of time.
- Manner of proceeding or happening; way in which something goes on; course or order of events.
- An action, operation, or method of treatment applied to something; a series of actions or experiments: as, a chemical process; a manufacturing process; mental process.
- Series of motions or changes going on, as in growth, decay, etc.: as, the process of vegetation; the process of decomposition.
- In law: The summons, mandate, or command by which a defendant or a thing is brought before the court for litigation: so called as being the primary part of the proceedings, by which the rest is directed.
- Hence A relation; narrative; story; detailed account.
- The whole course of proceedings in a cause, real or personal, civil or criminal, from the original writ to the end of the suit.
- Cowles's process, a process for making aluminium and other alloys, by placing a mixture of alumina, carbon, and the metal to be alloyed between two large carbon rods, the terminals of an interrupted current of high power. The intense heat melts the metal and converts the alumina into aluminium, while the oxygen escapes as carbonic oxid.
- Deville's process, a process in which aluminium sodium chlorid is reduced by sodium, with cryolite or fluor-sparas a flux. Deville was the first to produce aluminium in an almost pure state (1854) and to determine its properties en masse. He also discovered simultaneously with Bunsen a method of decomposing alum sodium chlorid by an electric battery.
- Grabau's process, a process based on the electrolysis of a bath composed of aluminium fluoride and caustic soda of potash, or their carbonates. The substitution of aluminium fluoride for cryolite greatly increases the purity of the metal.
- Hall's process, an electrolvtic process by which most of the aluminium in the United States is produced. In this process the alumina is dissolved in a fused bath composed of the fluorides of aluminium and sodium, and then electrolysed by a current with a carbonaceous anode. The positive electrode may be of carbon, copper, platinum, or any other suitable material, copper being preferred on account of the copper oxid which protects the electrode from further oxidation. In the production of aluminium alloys the metal to be alloyed is used as a negative electrode and the alloy formed sinks to the bottom of the crucible. In the Hall process, as used by some of the larger manufacturers, the electrolytic tanks are iron troughs lined with carbon and connected up in series, each trough being connected by a stout copper bar with the anodes of the adjoining trough or with the negative conductor of the generator, according to its position in the series. Thus the tank itself acts as the cathode. The anodes are carbon rods suspended from a copper bar, which are placed above the vat and are partly immersed in the fused electrolyte.
- Héroult's process, a process similar to that of Hall but. discovered independently by Héroult in 1886. It is the only process which is used for the production of aluminium on a large scale outside of the United States.
- Minet's process, a process consisting in the electrolysis of a mixture of sodium chlorid with either aluminium fluoride or the separate or double fluorides of aluminium and sodium. The mixture is melted in a non-metallic crucible, or in a metallic crucible inclosed in a thin refractory jacket to avoid filtration, and the aluminium fluoride decomposed is regenerated by causing the fluorin vapors evolved to act on bauxite or alumina placed somewhere about the anode.
- Rose's process (1855), a modification of Deville's method, cryolite being substituted for aluminium chlorid.
- Wöhler's process. Wöhler is regarded as the first to succeed in isolating aluminium. In his experiments of 1845 he reduced aluminium chlorid by means of pure potassium. The metal was obtained in the shape of small globules and contained some platinum from the tube in which it had been prepared. He was also the first to give a more or less accurate description of the chemical properties of aluminium and to determine its specific gravity.
- A process for desilverizing lead by treating it with zinc and subjecting the mixture to a temperature sufficiently high to melt the lead but leave the zinc-silver alloy merely softened. During the operation air is excluded in order to prevent the formation of metallic oxids.
- A method, also invented by Castner, of making metallic sodium by the electrolysis of fused caustic soda. Sodium hydroxid (caustic soda) is reduced by heating it with carbon, the carbon being in small grains which are loaded with iron so as not to float in the fused mass but to remain covered by it. The process does not require a very high temperature. By means of it sodium was produced at a small fraction of its previous cost, and metallic aluminium (which later was further cheapened by electric reduction) was reduced in price.
- An electrothermic process for the production of steel. The furnace used in this process is of the tilting open-hearth pattern, consisting of an iron casing lined with dolomite brick and magnesite brick around the openings. The electrodes are square prisms and are made of retort-coke containing some sulphur. They are introduced through the roof and are water-jacketed for a short distance above and below then- passage through the roof. The charge consists of miscellaneous scrap and some iron ore and lime. The electrodes are suspended just above the slag line and the electric current passes from one electrode through the slag and the molten metal to the other electrode, its intensity being regulated by adjusting the width of the air-gap between the electrodes and the slag.
- One of the two processes which by fusion form the jugum of the Brachiopoda.
- A cementation process for hardening the surface of steel plates similar to the Harvey process but with certain secret variations or additions.
- A process for making joints by bringing the two elements just to fusion at their contact-edges, so that they become one where they touch, without a solder or alloy.
- A charcoal hearth (process) for refining cast-iron, used largely in Sweden (Swedish Walloon) and in Lancashire and South Wales (English Walloon). The charcoal hearths are usually low rectangular chambers with one or more twyers. The fuel is charcoal, and the wrought-iron produced by this process is superior to that produced by puddling, on account of its freedom from phosphorus. In Sweden the Walloon process is applied chiefly to the manufacturing of Dannemora iron.
- The act of proceeding; continued forward movement; procedure; progress; advance.
- A series of actions, motions, or occurrences; progressive act or transaction; continuous operation; normal or actual course or procedure; regular proceeding
- A statement of events; a narrative.
- Any marked prominence or projecting part, especially of a bone; anapophysis.
- A method of obtaining chlorine gas by passing hydrochloric acid gas over heated slag which has been previously saturated with a solution of some metallic salt, as sulphate of copper.
- A writ of execution in an action at law.
- Fibers of the sacrosciatic ligament reflected on to the ramus of theischium.
- Proclamation.
- In anatomy and zoology, a processus; an outgrowth or outgrowing part; a protuberance; a prominence; a projection: used in the widest sense, specific application being made by some qualifying term: as, coracoid process.
- In botany, a projection from a surface; specifically, in mosses, one of the principal divisions or segments of the inner peristome.
- Same as photo-process: commonly used attributively: as, process blocks, process cuts, process pictures, etc.
- In fish-culture, a process of fecundating spawn, invented by V. P. Vrasski. It differs from the moist process by requiring two vessels, one for the spawn, which is placed in it without water, and the other for the milt, to which water is added to moisten the eggs. By the dry process, scarcely one per cent. of the eggs escape fecundation, while in the moist method ten or twelve per cent. of the spawn may be lost.
- In assaying. See assaying.
- Of the sphenoid, the inferior hook-like extremity of the internal pterygoid plate, under which the tendon of the tensor palati plays.
- Of the turbinate bone, a flattened plate descending from the attached margin, forming, when articulated, a part of the inner wall of the antrum below the entrance.
- Same as lacrymal process.
- Same as nasal spine (which see, under nasal).
- Of the temporal, a flattened plate of bone on the under surface of the petrous portion, immediately back of the glenoid fossa, and partly surrounding the styloid process at its base.
- A short, stout, pyramidal process projecting downward from the onter part of the distal extremity of the radius.
- A short cylindrical eminence at the inner and back part of the distal extremity of the ulna.
- A long, slender, tapering process projecting downward and forward from the outer part of the under surface of the petrous portion of the temporal bone: it is developed from independent centers of ossification, corresponding to the tympanohyal and stylohyal bones.
- Inferior, the folded margin of the sphenoid overhanging the middle meatus. Also called superior and middle spongy bones.
- See the adjectives.
PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: VERB
- N/A
- Institute legal proceedings against; file a suit against
- Shape, form, or improve a material
- March in a procession
- Deliver a warrant or summons to someone
- Perform mathematical and logical operations on (data) according to programmed instructions in order to obtain the required information
- Subject to a process or treatment, with the aim of readying for some purpose, improving, or remedying a condition
- Deal with in a routine way
PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- N/A
- To proceed against by legal process; summon in a court of law.
- To reproduce, as a drawing, etc., by any mechanical process, especially by a photographic process. See photo-process.
- In leather-making, to treat or soak in liquor.
- A writ issued by authority of law
- Usually compels the defendant's attendance in a civil suit
- File a suit against
PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: RELATED WORDS
- Rules, Proceedings, Procedural, Processes, Methods, Protocol, Technique, Method, Surgery, Subprogram, Subroutine, Function, Operation, Routine, Process
- Swear out, Unconscious process, Summons, Treat, Sue, Work on, Serve, Appendage, Outgrowth, March, Litigate, Act, Work, Operation, Procedure
PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Modality, Practice, Treatment, Formalities, Rules, Procedural, Protocol, Technique, Method, Surgery, Subroutine, Function, Operation, Routine, Process
- Cycle, Phase, Method, Procedures, Cognitive process, Treat, Work on, Serve, Appendage, Outgrowth, March, Act, Work, Operation, Procedure
PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Grievance Procedure There must be a grievance procedure specified in the operating rules of the Chapter.
- Time spent after the procedure performing or interpreting neurophysiologic studies should not be counted as IONM, but reported as a separate procedure.
- This modifier would also be used to identify a procedure performed unilaterally which is defined by CPT as a bilateral procedure.
- NOTE: IF the theft deterrent relearn procedure does not work, please try the procedure again, before calling Technical Services.
- Instead they are procedure steps and are written in procedure format.
- Stored Procedure because here we use as the query type Stored Procedure.
- The procedure on appeal shall be governed by the Tennessee Rules of Appellate Procedure.
- Although California does not require the following procedure, we recommend landlords follow this procedure to reduce confusion and legal trouble.
- This procedure also applies to misconduct not covered by the Title IX Sexual Harassment Policy and Procedure.
- Civil Procedure, focusing almost exclusively on the procedure of Montana.
- When you process the upload file, you can choose to process only the records for the state of California.
- We assist you in the preparation process to ensure that your birth certificate will meet the criteria of the process.
- In fact, and I want to ask you to think about one issue regarding process beyond process.
- It is a standard process, check the high commission or consulate website of India in Nepal and go with that process.
- Worked on developing various ITIL Processes includes Incident Management Process, Release Management Process, etc.
- Designed and implemented the Technology Introduction Process, Standard Operating Environment and Architecture Governance process.
- Systems Diagrams are often used to consider a project or process such as in our case the assessment process.
- Not only was our refinance process a breeze but we had clarity through the entire process.
- Implemented Business Process Management system for enhanced process improvement in change control functionality.
- First, the process of reviewing consumer clauses might be Employment Due Process Protocol.
PROCEDURE vs PROCESS: QUESTIONS
- Is cholangiography an endoscopic diagnostic procedure?
- Is the downstream audit procedure easier than the upstream audit procedure?
- How will the new procedure of MHADA ease the procedure of complaints?
- How does the called procedure return the control to the calling procedure?
- How to call a stored procedure from another stored procedure?
- How does a surgical procedure differ from a medical procedure?
- Is there an alternate procedure to the summary procedure for contempt?
- Which procedure uses the procedure called genetic engineering?
- What are the rules of procedure in civil procedure?
- Are procedure 231-7 and procedure 110-montauk related?
- What is the multigenerational transmission process?
- What is the first process in the perception process?
- Why is process memory so much larger than process memory?
- What happens at the end of the business process re-engineering process?
- How to find the process ID of the process using a port?
- How does the business purchase decision-making process differ from the consumer process?
- What is meant by isentropic process and internally reversible process?
- Does IIs support worker process isolation mode and process recycling?
- Is photosynthesis an anabolic process or a catabolic process?
- Is diffusion a passive process or an active process?