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“periods”
A punctuation, ., which is placed at the end of a declarative sentence to indicate a full stop or after abbreviations.
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Punctuation Marks with Symbols, Explanations, and Examples
(page 1)
(conceptions of dreams from different cultures and during different historical periods)
(periods used as punctuation marks)
Word Entries containing the term:
“periods”
A period when writing systems or some unique feature existed; epoch; era: The historic period in any particular region begins when writing systems emerge or when literate cultures come into contact with the regions preliterate inhabitants.
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Archeology, Archaeology
(page 4)
The time required for a celestial body in the solar system to complete one revolution with respect to the fixed stars (as observed from a fixed point outside the system). A planet's sidereal period can be calculated from its synodic period or the length of time during which a body in the solar system makes one orbit of the sun relative to the Earth.
The sidereal period of the Moon or an artificial satellite of the Earth is the time it takes to return to the same position against the background of stars.
This entry is located in the following unit:
Astronomy and related astronomical terms
(page 23)
The length of time during which a body in the solar system makes one orbit of the Sun relative to the Earth, that means that it returns to the same elongation: Because the Earth moves in its own orbit, the synodic period differs from the sidereal period, which is measured relative to the stars.
The synodic period of the Moon, which is called the lunar month, or lunation, is 29 1/2 days long which is longer than the sidereal month.
The synodic period is the time required for a body in the solar system to return to the same or about the same position relative to the Sun as seen from the Earth.
The Moon's synodic period is the time between successive recurrences of the same phase, that means the period between one full moon and the next full moon.
This entry is located in the following unit:
Astronomy and related astronomical terms
(page 25)