Vo Sot Definition

The Contractor and Supervisors shall write to Engineer –in-charge to ensure refresher training from Safety Department before the expiry of the date of validity of SOT.

For an SOT thesis, other than single-spacing footnotes and centering page numbers at the bottom of the page, no exceptions are to be made to the approved Turabian style.

See cue light; red light syndrome; tally light (Page 596 in Re ABCs).voiceover with soundbite or VO/SOT (voiceover video to sound- on-“tape”) – In this case, the studio anchor reads copy live over video as in a “straight” voiceover story –but when the copy and pictures end, an interview (SOT) immediately comes up.

In order to provide the most up to date and current training under the contract, the contractor shall attend assurance and operability tests for new construction ships and those completing overhaul, to include but not limited to: Ships Installation Assurance Tests (SIAT), Ships Operability Tests (SOT), Carrier Operability Tests (COT), Yard Walk Through (YWT), and Ship’s Suitability Tests (SST).

Capacity Credit grantors' measurement of a person's ability to repay loans. Capacity The theoretical maximum number of products a company can produce at a given time. For example, an oil pump may have a capacity of X barrels per day, meaning that it cannot produce more than X. Companies rarely operate at full capacity, both to allow themselves leeway in. VO/SOT (Voice over to Sound on Tape) Script read by the anchor/reporter with video of the story and using parts of an interview to support the story, written in all caps for VO; upper/lower case for SOT. A voice-over, or VO, is a video article narrated by the anchor. Sound on tape, or SOT, is sound or video usually recorded in the field. It is usually an interview or soundbite. Radio was the first medium for broadcast journalism. Many of the first radio stations were co-operative community radio ventures not making a profit.

Mr. Findlay referred in his affidavit to the term 'sold out of trust', or SOT, a term apparently widely used in the automobile industry, to refer to the situation in which a borrower such as Carnival fails to remit to its lender the proceeds of sale of a financed vehicle.

(redirected from VO2 max BP)
Also found in: Dictionary, Thesaurus, Legal, Financial, Encyclopedia.
Related to VO2 max BP: ventilatory threshold, Heart Rate Reserve, Fick equation

capacity

[kah-pas´ĭ-te]
the power to hold, retain, or contain, or the ability to absorb; usually expressed numerically as the measure of such ability.
closing capacity (CC) the volume of gas in the lungs at the time of airway closure, the sum of the closing volume and the residual volume. See also closing volume.
decreased intracranial adaptive capacity a nursing diagnosis accepted by the North American Nursing Diagnosis Association, defined as the state in which intracranial fluid dynamic mechanisms that normally compensate for increases in intracranial volumes are compromised, resulting in repeated disproportionate increases in intracranial pressure in response to a variety of noxious and nonnoxious stimuli.
Sot
forced vital capacity the maximal volume of gas that can be exhaled from full inhalation by exhaling as forcefully and rapidly as possible. See also pulmonary function tests.
functional residual capacity the amount of gas remaining at the end of normal quiet respiration.
heat capacity the amount of heat required to raise the temperature of a specific quantity of a substance by one degree Celsius.
inspiratory capacity the volume of gas that can be taken into the lungs in a full inhalation, starting from the resting inspiratory position; equal to the tidal volume plus the inspiratory reserve volume.
maximal breathing capacitymaximum voluntary ventilation.
total lung capacity the amount of gas contained in the lung at the end of a maximal inhalation.
 Subdivisions of total lung capacity: TLC, total lung capacity; V, tidal volume; IC, inspiratory capacity; FRC, functional residual capacity; ERV, expiratory reserve volume; VC, vital capacity; RV, residual volume. From Dorland's, 2000.
virus neutralizing capacity the ability of a serum to inhibit the infectivity of a virus.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.
Definition

ca·pac·i·ty

(kă-pas'i-tē),
1. The potential cubic contents of a cavity or receptacle.
See also: volume.
Vo Sot Definition
[L. capax, able to contain; fr. capio, to take]

capacity

Medspeak-UK
A generic term for the sum of the resources available to an organisation, service or community, including people, money, equipment, expertise, skills and information.
Psychology
A term referring to a person’s ability to understand and retain information about his/her medical condition and need for treatment.Vo sot definition biology
Segen's Medical Dictionary. © 2012 Farlex, Inc. All rights reserved.

capacity

Patient rights The capability of a person to function as an autonomous unit. See Testamentary capacity.
McGraw-Hill Concise Dictionary of Modern Medicine. © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

ca·pac·i·ty

(kă-pas'i-tē)
1. The potential cubic contents of a cavity or receptacle.
Vo/sot meaning
2. Ability to do something mental or physical.
See also: volume
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

capacity

the ability to store an electric charge, measured in farads (Fd).
Collins Dictionary of Biology, 3rd ed. © W. G. Hale, V. A. Saunders, J. P. Margham 2005

ca·pac·i·ty

(kă-pas'i-tē)
1. The potential cubic contents of a cavity or receptacle.
See also: volume
[L. capax, able to contain; fr. capio, to take]
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012

Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content.
Link to this page:

Vo Sot Definition Biology