You are on page 1of 2

3RD QUARTER REVIEWER.

MUSIC
 Music of India includes several types of folk and popular music.
 Shankh is an instrument from India.
 Harmonium is an instrument from Pakistan.
 Ghatam is an instrument from India.
 Dholak is an instrument from Pakistan.
 Lyre is instrument from Israel.
 VITAT – Described as bowed string instrument.
 AVANADDH - Described as membranous percussive instrument.
 SUSHIR - It is also known as “blown air.”
 TAT - Referred to as vina during the old civilization.
ARTS
 SOAPSTONE SEAL - Most famous remnants of the Indus civilization.
 SCULPTURE - It is considered as the primary traditional art form of South Asian.
 TAJ MAHAL - A mausoleum constructed from dazzling white marbles.
 AJANTA CAVES - 30 rock-cut cave monuments famous for its murals.
 RANGOLI - Making designs or patterns on floor of houses using colored sand or powder.
 TRUCK ART - Popular form of South Asian decoration on trucks.
 DIWALI - India’s festival of Lights.
 MOSQUE - The primary form of Indo-Islamic architecture.
 DIYAS - Clay lamps that symbolized inner light.
 HUMAN - The predominant subjects of South Asian sculpture.
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
 KING – Most important chess piece.
 QUEEN – Most powerful chess piece.
 KNIGHT - Move in an “L-shape”, two squares in a horizontal or vertical direction, then move
one square horizontally or vertically.
 When a player is able to place all seven tiles from the tile rack on the board, the player
receives 50 bonus points.
 F, H, V, W, AND Y – Has a value of 4 points
 K – Has a value of 5 points.
 DARK RED CELLS – (Triple word score)
 LIGHT RED CELLS – (Double word score)
 BLOCKING – The act of playing a word on the board that stops the opponent from making a
potentially large score.
 DRAW – A chess game where nobody ends as a winner.
 PROMOTION – A special ability of a pawn wherein if it reaches the last row of the other side of
the board.
 BACKWARD – Is the only thing that pawn cannot do.
HEALTH
 INCUBATION STAGE - This is the time between the exposure to a pathogen and the
appearance of symptoms.
 CONVALESCENT STAGE - It is the stage in which the symptoms of the disease begin to fade.
 DECLINING STAGE - The period when symptoms start to subside and the severity of disease
declines.
 ACUTE STAGE - It is the period when the disease is at its peak.
 PRODROMAL STAGE - It is the time when the signs and symptoms of a disease appear.
 AIRBORNE TRANSMISSION - A way of transmission where the pathogens are spread through
the air.
 VECTORS BORNE - A way of transmission where pathogens are spread by the animal or
insect usually through a bite.
 MORBIDITY - The condition of suffering from a disease or medical condition.
 MORTALITY - The state of being subject to death.
 INDIRECT CONTACT - A way of transmission, when the pathogens remain on the surfaces
that were in contact with an infected person.
STAGES OF INFECTION.
1. Incubation Stage
2. Prodromal Stage
3. Acute Stage
4. Declining Stage
5. Convalescent Stage
WAYS OF TRANSMISSION
1. Airborne Transmission
2. Direct Contact
3. Indirect Contact
4. Vectors Borne / Reservoirs
5. Food and Water

You might also like