MRZ (other)
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MRZ (other)
The Machine Readable Zone is part of a machine-readable passport. MRZ may also refer to: * Marind language, ISO 639-3 code * Moree Airport, IATA code * Međuopštinske regionalne zajednice, a historical administrative division of Serbia * Mrz, abbreviation of the month of March in Austria, Germany, and Switzerland date and time notation * MRZ reaction Several biomarkers for diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, disease evolution and response to medication (current or expected) are under research. While most of them are still under research, there are some of them already well stablished: *oligoclonal ..., combined reaction to Measles, Rubella and Zoster viruses See also * * 1mrz, SCOPE and SUPERFAMILY codes for riboflavin kinase * Merz (other) * MRS (other) * MR (other) * RZ (other) {{disambiguation ...
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Machine Readable Zone
A machine-readable passport (MRP) is a machine-readable travel document (MRTD) with the data on the identity page encoded in optical character recognition format. Many countries began to issue machine-readable travel documents in the 1980s. Most travel passports worldwide are MRPs. They are standardized by the '' ICAO Document 9303'' (endorsed by the International Organization for Standardization and the International Electrotechnical Commission as ISO/IEC 7501-1) and have a special ''machine-readable zone'' (''MRZ''), which is usually at the bottom of the identity page at the beginning of a passport. The ICAO 9303 describes three types of documents corresponding to the ISO/IEC 7810 sizes: * "Type 3" is typical of passport booklets. The MRZ consists of 2 lines × 44 characters. * "Type 2" is relatively rare with 2 lines × 36 characters. * "Type 1" is of a credit card-size with 3 lines × 30 characters. The fixed format allows specification of document type, name, document numb ...
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Marind Language
Marind is a Papuan language spoken in Malind District, Merauke Regency, Indonesia by over ten thousand people. Dialects are Southeast Marind, Gawir, Holifoersch, and Tugeri. Bian Marind (Northwest Marind), also known as Boven-Mbian, is divergent enough to not be mutually intelligible, and has been assigned a separate ISO code. Marind separates the Trans-Fly–Bulaka River languages The Trans-Fly – Bulaka River South-Central Papuan languages form a hypothetical family of Papuan languages. They include many of the languages west of the Fly River in southern Papua New Guinea into southern Indonesian West Papua, plus a pair ..., which would otherwise occupy a nearly continuous stretch of southern New Guinea. References Further reading * * * * Kriens, Ronald. 2003. Report on the Kumbe river survey south coast of Irian Jaya, Indonesia'. SIL International. Marind–Yaqai languages Languages of Western Province (Papua New Guinea) {{PapuaNewGuinea-stub ...
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Moree Airport
Moree Airport is an airport in Moree, New South Wales, Australia. The airport is from the city center. The airport has some scheduled services but mainly provides general aviation facilities, maintenance and support for agricultural aviation in the local area. The Moree Aero Club has been based at the airport since 1952, and today provides aircraft hire and flight training. The club was instrumental in providing many early improvements to the aerodrome facilities, including hangars and a terminal building. Airport facilities Moree airport has two operational runways. The primary runway 01/19 is sealed with an asphalt surface . This runway is equipped with pilot-operated lighting for night operations. A secondary gravel runway 05/23 is located on the western side of the field and is . The airport does not have a control tower as the typical volume of traffic is not high. Pilots are required to communicate via a Common Traffic Advisory Frequency (CTAF) to safely co-ordinate arr ...
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Historical Administrative Divisions Of Serbia
This is a list of historical administrative divisions of Serbia since the establishment of the Principality of Serbia until today. Principality of Serbia 1819–1833 12 ''nahije'' ( ''nahija'', from Ottoman ''nahiye''), 45 ''knežine'' ( ''knežina''), 1,396 villages and towns. 1834–1836 In 1833, six nahiye were ceded to Serbia with the "Third Hatišerif", an edict (''hatt-i sharif'') issued by Sultan Mahmud II (r. 1808–1839). In 1834, the Parliament decided that Serbia be divided on five governorships (''serdarstvo'') and 19 districts (''okrug''), thereby ending the form of administrative units that originated in the Ottoman Empire. The districts were in turn divided into captaincies (''kapetanije''), later called '' srezovi'' ( ''srez''). 1836–1878 Kingdom of Serbia Serbia gained full internationally recognized independence in 1878 and proclaimed a Kingdom in 1882. In 1890, it was divided into 15 districts ( okruzi) which were further divided into counties ( srezovi). ...
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Date And Time Notation In Europe
The European Committee for Standardization (CEN) and (CENELEC) adopted ISO 8601 with EN 28601, now EN ISO 8601. As a European Norm, CEN and CENELEC member states are obligated to adopt the standard as national standard without alterations as well. Except for Austria, Germany and Switzerland, see the navigation box on the bottom to find individual articles per country. European Commission Official EU documents still tend to use ''DD.MM.YYYY'' but one document specifies the use of ISO 8601: "Dates should be formatted by the following format: YYYY-MM-DD." Post-Soviet states Date In most post-Soviet states ''DD.MM.YYYY'' format is used with dots as separators and with leading zeros. Some, such as Lithuania, have adopted the ISO 8601 "YYYY-MM-DD"; previously a mixed standard with ISO 8601 order but dots as separators was in use. Time 24-hour time notation is used officially and for purposes that require precision like announcements in the media. In colloquial speech, the 12-hour c ...
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MRZ Reaction
Several biomarkers for diagnosis of multiple sclerosis, disease evolution and response to medication (current or expected) are under research. While most of them are still under research, there are some of them already well stablished: *oligoclonal bands: They present proteins that are in the CNS or in blood. Those that are in CNS but not in blood suggest a diagnosis of MS. *MRZ-Reaction: A polyspecific antiviral immune response against the viruses of measles, rubella and zoster found in 1992. In some reports the MRZR showed a lower sensitivity than OCB (70% vs. 100%), but a higher specificity (69% vs. 92%) for MS. *free light chains (FLC). Several authors have reported that they are comparable or even better than oligoclonal bands. They can be of several types like body fluid biomarkers, imaging biomarkers or genetic biomarkers. They are expected to play an important role in the near future of MS. Classification Biomarkers can be classified according to several criteria. It is c ...
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Riboflavin Kinase
In enzymology, a riboflavin kinase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction :ATP + riboflavin \rightleftharpoons ADP + FMN Thus, the two substrates of this enzyme are ATP and riboflavin, whereas its two products are ADP and FMN. Riboflavin is converted into catalytically active cofactors (FAD and FMN) by the actions of riboflavin kinase (), which converts it into FMN, and FAD synthetase (), which adenylates FMN to FAD. Eukaryotes usually have two separate enzymes, while most prokaryotes have a single bifunctional protein that can carry out both catalyses, although exceptions occur in both cases. While eukaryotic monofunctional riboflavin kinase is orthologous to the bifunctional prokaryotic enzyme, the monofunctional FAD synthetase differs from its prokaryotic counterpart, and is instead related to the PAPS-reductase family. The bacterial FAD synthetase that is part of the bifunctional enzyme has remote similarity to nucleotidyl transferases and, hence, it ma ...
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Merz (other)
Merz may refer to: * Merz (art style), a synonym for the more common term Dada * Merz (musician), a British electro-folk singer * Merz (surname) * Merz Apothecary, a historic German health care store in Chicago * Merz & McLellan, a British electrical engineering consultancy * Merz Peninsula, Palmer Land, Antarctica * Merz Pharma, an international health care company See also * * * Mers (other) * Mertz, a surname * MRZ (other) * Murs (other) {{disambiguation ...
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MRS (other)
Mrs. (American English) or Mrs (British English; standard English pronunciation: ) is a commonly used English honorific for women, usually for those who are married and who do not instead use another title (or rank), such as ''Doctor'', ''Professor'', ''President'', ''Dame'', etc. In most Commonwealth countries, a full stop (period) is usually not used with the title. In the United States and Canada a period (full stop) is usually used (see Abbreviation). ''Mrs'' originated as a contraction of the honorific ''Mistress'' (the feminine of ''Mister'' or ''Master'') which was originally applied to both married and unmarried women. The split into ''Mrs'' for married women and ''Miss'' for unmarried began during the 17th century; the 17th century also saw the coinage of a new unmarked option '' Ms'' with a return of this usage appearing in the 20th century. It is rare for ''Mrs'' to be written in a non-abbreviated form, and the unabbreviated word lacks a standard spelling. In lite ...
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MR (other)
''Mister'', usually written in its contracted form ''Mr.'' or ''Mr'', is a commonly used English honorific for men without a higher honorific, or professional title, or any of various designations of office. The title 'Mr' derived from earlier forms of ''master'', as the equivalent female titles ''Mrs'', ''Miss'', and '' Ms'' all derived from earlier forms of ''mistress''. ''Master'' is sometimes still used as an honorific for boys and young men. The modern plural form is ''Misters'', although its usual formal abbreviation ''Messrs''(.) derives from use of the French title ' in the 18th century. ' is the plural of ' (originally ', "my lord"), formed by declining both of its constituent parts separately. Historical etiquette Historically, ''mister'' was applied only to those above one's own status if they had no higher title such as ''Sir'' or ''my lord'' in the English class system. That understanding is now obsolete, as it was gradually expanded as a mark of respect to those ...
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