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Coarse and is
Coarse gold dust and nuggets do not require smelting, is easy to identify and is easily transported.
Coarse sea salt is placed in a large wok and heated to a high temperature.
Coarse whole-grain corn flour is usually called corn meal.
In the United States, bulgur is produced from white wheat in four distinct grinds or sizes (# 1 Fine, # 2 Medium, # 3 Coarse and # 4 Extra Coarse grinds.
Coarse woody debris is likely an important feature of Mexican and California Spotted Owl habitats.
Coarse aggregate is the standard material for track ballast, which provides drainage and resilience.
He is best known for The Art of Coarse Rugby, The Art of Coarse Acting and other books with similar titles.
" and goes on: " The Coarse Actor's aim is to upstage the rest of the cast.
Coarse woody debris ( CWD ) is a term used in English-speaking countries for fallen dead trees and the remains of large branches on the ground in forests and in rivers or wetlands.
Coarse woody debris is also important in wetlands, particularly in deltas where woody debris accumulates.
* DFB Laser Arrays based on several thermal tuned DFB lasers: Coarse tuning is achieved by selecting the correct laser bar.
Briquetage is also known as Very Coarse Pottery or VCP.
Coarse dark purple rhyodacite is in the north end near Queanbeyan turn off.
On the banks of river Betwa lies the Coarse sand which is then transported to many parts in U. P.

Coarse and almost
American Unified Coarse was originally based on almost the same imperial fractions.

Coarse and .
* Coarse roots: Roots that have undergone secondary thickening and have a woody structure.
* Coarse octahedrites, lamellae 1. 3-3. 3 mm, 6. 5-8. 5 % Ni, symbol Og
Coarse wavelength division multiplexing ( CWDM ) in contrast to conventional WDM and DWDM uses increased channel spacing to allow less sophisticated and thus cheaper transceiver designs.
File: Coarse woody debris in the Hallerburger Holz. jpg | Coarse woody debris in the " Hallerburger Holz " in Nordstemmen, Germany
In 1878, Geddes was the home of Western Coarse Salt Company, Turk's Island Coarse Salt Company, Geddes Coarse Salt Company, Union Coarse Salt Company, Cape Cod Coarse Salt Company, W. & D. Kirkpatrick of No. 7 Wieting Block, Draper & Porter, W. B. Boyd, Mrs. S. O. Ely and J. F. Paige.

cloth and is
The cloth is laid on one half of the bottom at a time.
When the cloth is smooth, apply another coat of resin, spreading it with a paint roller.
This is best demonstrated by practical washing tests in which cloth articles are repeatedly washed with the same detergent formulation.
This test method is intended for determining the dimensional changes of woven or knitted fabrics, made of fibers other than wool, to be expected when the cloth is subjected to laundering procedures commonly used in the commercial laundry and the home.
The specimen of fabric is a rectangle at least 22 by 22 inches, except for cloth narrower than 22 inches, in which case the specimen is the entire width of the fabric.
The men of Innesfree are got up authentically in cloth caps and sweaters, and their dancing and singing is fine.
Beadwork is the art or craft of attaching beads to one another or to cloth, usually by the use of a needle and thread or soft, flexible wire.
Phenolic sheet is a hard, dense material made by applying heat and pressure to layers of paper or glass cloth impregnated with synthetic resin.
Cross-stitch is often executed on easily countable evenweave fabric called aida cloth.
Occasionally, a cardinal wears a scarlet ferraiolo which is a cape worn over the shoulders, tied at the neck in a bow by narrow strips of cloth in the front, without any ' trim ' or piping on it.
But it is a tradition in the order that in the time of the founder they wore a coarse brown cloth.
His later work is highly emotional, using facial expressions, figural stance, and drapery ; this can be particularly seen in the heavy folds of cloth that so many later imitators draped around their figures.
Cheddar cheese was sometimes ( and still can be found ) packaged in black wax, but was more commonly packaged in larded cloth, which was impermeable to contaminants, but still allowed the cheese to " breathe ", although this practice is now limited to artisan cheese makers.
A beautiful cloth called Sufi is also woven of silk and cotton, or with cotton wrap and silk wool.
It is a special and delicate printing technique on both sides of the cloth in indigo blue and red patterns covering the base cloth.
When the key is released, the tangent loses contact with the string and the vibration of the string is silenced by strips of damping cloth.
The taiko drummer traditionally wears a " happi coat " or " hanten " ( a colorful festival coat ), " tabi " ( split toe shoes ), " tekko " ( wristbands ), momohiki ( pants ), hachimaki ( headband ), " haragake " ( traditional workman's apron ) with a haramaki underneath ( a strip of cloth wrapped around the midsection ), so most of the upper body is bare.
She is compared with Penthesilea, mythical queen of the Amazons, by the Greek historian Nicetas Choniates ; he adds that she gained the epithet chrysopous ( golden-foot ) from the cloth of gold that decorated and fringed her robe.
The Nihonshoki is more expansive, though the section is mythical, and almost wholly cut from the cloth of Chinese legends.

cloth and almost
Driving stocks were pivotted so that the foot ( the head of the hammer ) struck the cloth almost horizontally.
The upper side of the dō ( when on the player's lap ) is almost always protected by a cover known as a dō kake, and players often wear a little band of cloth on their left hand to facilitate sliding up and down the neck, known as a yubikake.
: In addition to reactor ’ s cloth modifier, 3ds Max software has an integrated cloth-simulation engine that enables the user to turn almost any 3D object into clothing, or build garments from scratch.
Dark green coats faced with scarlet and lined with the same, a waistcoat of green cloth, and Buckskin Indian leggings reaching from the ankle to the waist ... their caps were almost skull caps of black jacket leather or turned up felt with a black cockade on the left side.
Flat caps were almost universally worn in the 19th century by working class men throughout Britain and Ireland, and versions in finer cloth were also considered to be suitable casual countryside wear for upper-class English men ( hence the contemporary alternative name golf cap ).
Norfolk wool was best suited to heavier cloth, and so Norwich and Norfolk eventually gained almost a complete monopoly on worstead.
By the 19th century a badge was an almost invariable part of any uniform, including school uniforms, which in the UK usually still feature the school's badge in cloth on the breast pocket of the jacket or blazer.
In Chapter 11, Dejah Thoris derides Earth men, who " almost without exception, cover their bodies with strange, unsightly pieces of cloth.
The keffiyeh is almost always of white cotton cloth, but many have a checkered pattern in red or black stitched into them.
With something finally to trade and needing everything from nails, needles and almost anything made out of metal to fancy thread and cloth that could be sewn into fancy cloaks or ladies dresses, etc., they started trading with merchant ships from Boston, Massachusetts, Britain and other trading ports in Europe and the East Coast of the United States.
By contrast, Selectric-based printers could use only one type of ribbon — cloth or single-use carbon film — and were almost always equipped for the former for economic reasons.
However, this prosperity was almost removed from the village by the 1557 Act of Parliament, which forbade the making or selling of any woollen cloth except in a market town.
They plan to create bulletproof vests using an ER fluid because the ability to soak the fluid into cloth creates the potential for a very light vest that can change from a normal cloth into a hard covering almost instantaneously.
: Esdaile's method was to make the patient lie down in dark room, wearing only a loin cloth, and would repeatedly pass the hands in the shape of claws, slowly over the body, within one inch of the surface, from the back of the head to the pit of the stomach, breathing gently on the head and eyes all the time he seems to have sat behind the patient, leaning over him almost head to head and to have laid his right hand for extended periods on the pit of the stomach.
Iron and cloth were very important in regional networks, but the cloth industry in particular was ailing in 1857 because of severe competition from India, and over the next sixty years almost disappeared.
Married women in the area have traditionally worn a cloth over their hair ( irrespective of religion ), but garments like Hijab were previously almost unknown.
Leung almost burns a piece of cloth that wrapped the list, but saves it from the fire.
ikue usually comes up with the stupidest, almost Mr. Bean-ish solutions ( giving Eriko a " mini sleeping pill " to help her relax because she had been up all night watching Doraemon videos ) and games ( spilling floor wax and using the cloth to slide on ).
It was made from wool or a wool / linen combination and twill woven in a pattern of colored stripes which today has become known as tartan, though originally the word tartan referred to the type of cloth ( like linen, or cotton ) and not the pattern of colors as the word almost exclusively signifies today.
According to a glossary found on an Episcopal parish's website, the altar cloth they use "... covers the top of the altar and hangs down the sides almost to the floor.

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