cat wiki:
>See also Cat (disambiguation) The acronym CAT may stand for:Cable Avoidance ToolCalifornia Achievement TestCall Any TimeCalling All TroopsCamarillo Area TransitCambridge Antibody Technology, the UK biotechnology companyCanadian Association of TransplantationCanby Area Transit, a public transportation bus service in Canby, OregonCanine Agility TeamCapital Acquisitions TaxCapital Area TransitCapsule Ariane TechnologiesCarboxyatractylosideCarburetor Air TemperatureCasual American TeenagerCatalan languageCataloniaCatalunyaCatalystCatalytic ConverterCatamaranCatapultCataractCatastropheCatch Airboat ThievesCatechismCatenateCaterpillarCECOM Accreditation TeamCellular Action TeamCenter for Advanced TechnologiesCenter for Appropriate TransportCentral African TimeCentral Alaska TimeCentral Area Transit, the free bus transit system that running in Perth City.Central Arizona TrailsCentral Arkansas TransitCentral Artery-TunnelCentre for Alternative Technology, an eco-centre in WalesCertified Automotive TechnicianChange Agent TeamChannel Available TimeCharges, easy Access and fair TermsChemical Addition TankChicago Area TheatresChromatic Adaptation TransformCitizens Against TollsCitizens Area Transit, public transportation by bus in Clark County, Nevada (Las Vegas)Citizens' Army TrainingCivic Action TeamCivil Air Transport, the airline forerunner of Air America that was formed after World War II by General Claire Lee Chennault of the Flying TigersCivil Aviation TribunalCivilian Augmented TrainingClear air turbulence, a term in aviationClemson Area TransitCloud Arrival TimeCockpit Automation TechnologyCognitive Ability TestCoital Alignment TechniqueCollaborative Access TeamCollege Ability TestCollege of Advanced TechnologyCombat AGE TeamCombat Aircraft TechnologyCombat Aircrew TrainingCombat Application TourniquetCombat Auto TheftCombined Acceptance TrialsCombined Arms TeamCombined Arms TrainingCommand Action TeamCommodity Action TeamCommon Admission Test, a graduate test in India, conducted by the Indian Institutes of Management or by Cochin University of Science and TechnologyCommon Aptitude TestCommon Authentication TechnologyCommunications Assist TeamCommunity Action TeamCompact Audio TechnologyCompetency Assessment ToolComplementary Angle TheoremCompliance Assessment TeamComponent Advanced TechnologyComputer-adaptive test, a type of test that dynamically adapts to the testee's ability levelComputer-aided tomographyComputer Aided Transceiver, a class of software application and communications interface used for the control of radio transmitting and receiving equipment, especially amateur (ham) radios.Computer-aided technologyComputer-aided trainingComputer-aided transcriptionComputer-aided translationComputer-assisted translation, a form of computer software used to help human translatorsComputed axial tomography, a tomographical X-ray techniqueCosmic Anisotropy Telescope, the first telescope to measure fine details in the fireball from the Big BangCulture, Art, & Technology, the core writing courses that all Sixth College UC San Diego students are required to take.
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lie wiki:
>For other uses, see Lie (disambiguation). A lie is a statement made by someone who believes or suspects it to be false, in the expectation that the hearers may believe it. Thus a true statement may be a lie if the speaker thinks it is false. Fictions, though false, are not necessarily lies. Inasmuch as lying involves pretended truth, the truth pretended is an imaginary antecedent. Depending on definitions, a lie can be a genuine falsehood or a selective truth, a lie by omission, or even the truth if the intention is to deceive or to cause an action not in the listener's interests. To lie is to tell a lie. A person who tells a lie, and especially a person who habitually tells lies, is a liar. To lie involves intentional deception.
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ball wiki:
>For other uses, see Ball (disambiguation). A ball is a round object that is used most often in sports and games. Balls are usually hollow and spherical but can be other shapes, such as ovoid (only in a few special cases) or solid (as in billiards) and flat (as in ice hockey). In most games using balls, the play of the game follows the state of the ball as it is hit, kicked, or thrown by players.
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