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Turnover Rate
Turnover or turn over may refer to: Arts, entertainment, and media *'' Turn Over'', a 1988 live album by Japanese band Show-Ya *Turnover (band), an American rock band *"Turnover", a song on Fugazi's 1990 album ''Repeater'' *''Turnover'', a Japanese manga and animated short animated by Studio 4°C * "Turnover" (''Hit the Floor''), an episode of ''Hit the Floor'' Business *Turnover (employment), relative rate at which an employer gains and loses staff *Asset turnover or asset turns, a financial ratio that measures the efficiency of a company's use of its assets in generating sales revenue *Customer attrition, the rate at which a business loses customers, sometimes called the churn * Inventory turnover or inventory turns, a measure of the number of times inventory is sold or used in a time period * Sales turnover or revenue, income a business has from sales *Turnover tax, an indirect tax similar to a sales tax or a VAT Science * Cell turnover, the replacement of old cells with newly ...
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Turn Over
''Turn Over'' is the first live album of the Japanese rock group Show-Ya. It is a collection of live songs recorded during concerts from the "Date Line Tour" and "Immigration Tour" in 1987, and from the "Tour of the Immigrant" in 1988. The album reached position No. 36 in the Japanese Oricon chart. Track listing #"S・T・O・P (But I Can't...)" – 4:35 #"Mizu no Naka no Toubousha" (水の中の逃亡者) – 3:57 #"Shidokenaku Emotion" (しどけなくエモーション) – 4:21 #"Mr. J" – 4:27 #"Origination" – 0:48 #"Kodoku no Meiro (Labyrinth)" (孤独の迷路(ラビリンス)) – 5:06 #"Fairy" – 5:04 #"Hurry Up" – 8:15 #"One Way Heart" – 4:10 #"You Turn Me Over" – 4:31 #"Toki Wo Koete" (時を越えて) – 7:04 #"Sono Ato De Koroshitai" (その後で殺したい) – 4:20 #"Narcissist" (ナルシスト) – 4:10 Personnel Band Members *Keiko Terada is a Japanese rock singer. She was co-founder and lead singer of the successful Japanese female hard ...
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Turnover Number
Turnover number has two different meanings: In enzymology, turnover number (also termed ''k''cat) is defined as the maximum number of chemical conversions of substrate molecules per second that a single active site will execute for a given enzyme concentration _T/math> for enzymes with two or more active sites. For enzymes with a single active site, ''k''cat is referred to as the catalytic constant. It can be calculated from the maximum reaction rate V_\max and catalyst site concentration _T/math> as follows: :k_\mathrm = \frac (See Michaelis–Menten kinetics). In other chemical fields, such as organometallic catalysis, turnover number (abbreviated ''TON'') has a different meaning: the number of moles of substrate that a mole of catalyst can convert before becoming inactivated. An ideal catalyst would have an infinite turnover number in this sense, because it would never be consumed. The term turnover frequency (abbreviated ''TOF'') is used to refer to the turnover per unit tim ...
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Turn (other)
Turn may refer to: Arts and entertainment Dance and sports * Turn (dance and gymnastics), rotation of the body * Turn (swimming), reversing direction at the end of a pool * Turn (professional wrestling), a transition between face and heel * Turn, a quality of spin bowling in cricket Film and television * ''Turn'' (film), a 2001 Japanese film * ''The Turn'' (film), a 2012 short film * '' Turn: Washington's Spies'', a 2014 television series on AMC, which takes place during the American Revolutionary War * "The Turn", an episode of ''One Day at a Time'' (2017 TV series) Games * Turn (game), a segment of a game * Turn (poker), the fourth of five community cards Literature * Turn (poetry), or volta, a major shift in a poem's rhetorical and/or dramatic trajectory * ''The Turn'' (novel), a 1902 novel by Luigi Pirandello * ''The Turn'', an epidemic in Kim Harrison's '' Hollows'' series Music * Turn (band), an Irish rock group * Turn (music), a sequence of adjacent notes in the sc ...
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Overturn
''Overturn'' is a video game developed by Japanese company Studio Zan for WiiWare. It was released in Japan on December 2, 2008, in North America on August 3, 2009, and in Europe on February 12, 2010, by Gamebridge as ''Overturn: Mecha Wars''. Gameplay The game is set on the planet Zastadion where the player competes in a tournament that sees them controlling a hovering mecha armed with an arsenal of weapons to battle others in an arena. Players can compete in six classes of increasing difficulty: Rookie, Novice, Elite, Ace, Grand and Master, and choose from eight mechas, each with different attributes. Players can also upgrade their weapons and mecha with parts scavenged from their defeated opponents as they progress through the game. The game also supports 2 player split screen multiplayer, and up to 4 online through the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection. It is controlled using the Wii Remote and Nunchuk, and also supports the Wii Balance Board. Reception Although Nintendo Life found ...
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Over (other)
Over may refer to: Places *Over, Cambridgeshire, England *Over, Cheshire, England *Over, South Gloucestershire, England *Over, Tewkesbury, near Gloucester, England **Over Bridge *Over, Seevetal, Germany Music Albums * ''Over'' (album), by Peter Hammill, 1977 * ''Over'' (EP), by Jarboe and Telecognac, 2000 Songs * "Over" (Blake Shelton song) * "Over" (Drake song) * "Over" (Evans Blue song) * "Over" (Fayray song) * "OVER" (Hey! Say! JUMP song) * "Over" (High and Mighty Color song) * "Over" (Lindsay Lohan song) * "Over" (Portishead song) *"Over", by A Perfect Circle from ''Mer de Noms'' *"Over", by Embrace from ''If You've Never Been'' *"Over", by Jimmy Eat World from ''Stay on My Side Tonight'' *"Over", by Zarif from '' Box of Secrets'' *"Over", a commonly used unofficial title for a studio outtake by Cardiacs included on ''Toy World'' Other uses *Over, a term in radio radiotelephony procedure *Over, a professional wrestling term *Over (cricket), a division of play in the sport ...
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Turnover Pistol
The pepper-box revolver or simply pepperbox (also "pepper-pot", from its resemblance to the household pepper shakers) is a multiple-barrel firearm, mostly in the form of a handgun, that has three or more gun barrels in a coaxially revolving mechanism. Each barrel holds a single shot, and the shooter can manually rotate the whole barrel assembly to sequentially index each barrel into alignment with the lock or hammer, similar to rotation of a revolver's cylinder. Pepperbox guns have existed for all types of firelock firearms and metal cased ammunition systems used in breechloading firearms: matchlock, wheellock, flintlock, snaplock, caplock, pinfire, rimfire and centerfire. While they are usually sidearms, a few long guns were also made. For example, Samuel Colt owned a three-barrel pepperbox matchlock musket from British India, and an eight-barrel pepperbox shotgun was designed in 1967 but never went into production. Early years This type of firearm was popular in Nort ...
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Turnover Bridge
A roving bridge, changeline bridge, turnover bridge, or snake bridgeWilliam George Victor Balchin, ed., ''The Country Life Book of the Living History of Britain'', 1983, , p. 109 is a bridge over a canal constructed to allow a horse towing a boat to cross the canal when the towpath changes sides. This often involved unhitching the tow line, but on some canals they were constructed so that there was no need to do this by placing the two ramps on the same side of the bridge (see middle photo), which turned the horse through 360 degrees. On the Macclesfield Canal this was achieved by building spiral ramps and on the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal and others by constructing roving bridges of iron in two cantilevered halves, leaving a slot in the middle for the tow rope. This was also called a split bridge. For cost reasons many ordinary Stratford bridges were also built in this way as they had no towpath. Bridges were also necessary at canal junctions and where the towpath was interrupte ...
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Turnover (food)
A turnover is a type of pastry made by placing a filling on a piece of dough, folding the dough over, sealing it, and then baking it. Turnovers can be sweet or savoury and are often made as a sort of portable meal or dessert. They are often eaten for breakfast. It is common for sweet turnovers to have a fruit filling and be made with a puff pastry or shortcrust pastry dough and covered with icing; savoury turnovers generally contain meat and/or vegetables and can be made with any sort of dough, though a kneaded yeast dough seems to be the most common in Western cuisines. They are usually baked, but may be fried. Savoury turnovers are often sold as convenience foods in supermarkets. Savoury turnovers with meat or poultry and identified as a turnover in the United States (for example, "Beef Turnover" or "Cheesy Chicken Turnover") have to meet a standard of identity or composition and should contain a certain amount of meat or poultry. Names A meat or vegetarian turnover may be ...
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Turnover (rugby Union)
Rugby union is a team sport played between two teams of fifteen players. This is a general glossary of the terminology used in the sport of rugby union. Where words in a sentence are also defined elsewhere in this article, they appear in italics. __NOTOC__ 0-9 22 The 22 m line, marking from the tryline. 89 An "89" or ''eight-nine move'' is a phase following a ''scrum'', in which the ''number 8'' picks up the ball and transfers it to number 9 (''scrum-half''). 99 The "99" call was a policy of simultaneous retaliation by the 1974 British Lions tour to South Africa, (the 99 comes from the British emergency services telephone number which is 999). The tour was marred by on-pitch violence, which the match officials did not adequately control and the relative absence of cameras compared to the modern game made citing and punishment after the fact unlikely. The Lions' captain, Willie John McBride (Ireland), therefore instigated a policy of "one in, all in" - that is, wh ...
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Turnover (rugby League)
Like most forms of modern football, rugby league football is played outdoors on a rectangular grass field with goals at each end that are to be attacked and defended by two opposing teams. The rules of rugby league have changed significantly over the decades since rugby football split into the league and union codes. This article details the modern form of the game and how it is generally played today, however rules do vary slightly between specific competitions. Basics Field A game of rugby league consists of two forty-minute halves, played by two teams on a rectangular grass field 120 metres long and 58–68 metres wide, depending on the individual ground. In the middle of the field is the 50-metre "halfway" line. Each side of the field, on either side of the 50-metre line, is identical. 10 metres from the 50-metre line is the 40-metre line, followed by the 30, 20, 10-metre and goal or "try" lines. This makes up 100 metres of field that is used for general play. At the m ...
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Turnover (gridiron Football)
In gridiron football, a turnover occurs when the team with the ball loses possession of the ball without kicking it, which is then gained by the other team. In American football, the two events that are officially classified as "turnovers" are fumbles (accidental loss of a live ball after a player has possession) and interceptions (passes intended for a member of the passing team, but caught by a member of the defending team). In addition, the term "turnover" is often used to refer to a turnover on downs, when a team attempts to gain a first down, touchdown or field goal on a fourth down play (known as a fourth down conversion), but is unsuccessful. When this occurs, the opposing team automatically gains possession at the spot to which the ball was advanced at the end of the play, unless a penalty has occurred (every defensive penalty, if accepted, results either in an automatic first down or a replay of down). In this event, the team that has lost possession is not permitted an o ...
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