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Discover Ludwig"tmi" is a correct and usable acronym in written English.
It stands for "too much information" and is used to indicate that a person has disclosed too much information about themselves or some other subject. For example: "I told him about the argument we had, but then I felt like I shared too much. I guess that was tmi."
Dictionary
tmi
noun
Trimethylindium, the most preferred metallorganic source of Indium used in MOCVD of compound semiconductors for opto-electronics applications.
Exact(60)
Yet travelers tend to live in the opposite of our TMI world: we get too little information.
(TMI?) Alan Sepinwall: Getting back to that earlier question about the male characters and the title, it's interesting that in this episode, at least, most of the really quotable jokes came from Adam or O'Dowd.
Jack Breese, a San Francisco resident who also works in tech, displayed a sign that read "The NSA has TMI", or too much information.
Chicago's photograph is aptly named; it is a confrontation that highlights just how radical some of these works were and continue to be, even today, in this TMI era of social media.
Kara says: "TMI.
Not really one for the TMI world of social media – she chose to produce an entire album's worth of material on her husband's infidelity rather than talking it through with anyone, least of all an interviewer.
"I don't think this is TMI [too much information], but my wife and I like to lie in bed and watch Netflix," he said.
The industry is also mature now, they say; both companies and regulators know how to avoid the costly bureaucratic quagmire that followed the TMI accident.
Even so, careful analysis of the delays after the TMI accident shows that technical hitches were largely to blame, rather than red tape.
In that time, TMI has become one of the most efficiently run and safest nuclear plants in America, as well as one of the most profitable.
TMI, for example, was bought for a pittance and so cranks out power for virtually nothing.Yet liberalisation is also exposing the true economics of new plants, and is aiming a fierce spotlight at the hefty subsidies that nuclear power has long enjoyed.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com