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Cutting a solid body into pieces disrupts its bonds, and therefore consumes energy.
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Cutting and solid
* Brush hook: Cutting tool used to clear brush, longer than a machete, usually with a heavy, solid, curved blade bolted to the end of an arm's-length handle.
Cutting and body
" SCUM ", generally held to be an acronym of " Society for Cutting Up Men ", actually does not appear as an acronym in the body of the manifesto.
Cutting away body parts is the easiest with Lambretta scooters, because they are built on a tubular frame, which means that the body parts do not have a structural role.
In town, Doctor Reynolds ( Richard H. Cutting ) performs an autopsy on Ben, but when he cannot explain Ben's rigidity, he informs Dave and Police Chief Dan Corey ( William Flaherty ) that he is shipping the body to a specialist.
Cutting and into
Cutting short a holiday at Hong Kong, the aircraft carriers Lexington and Bennington steamed off into the South China Sea, accompanied by a swarm of destroyers, plus troopships loaded with marines.
Cutting to different angles within a scene now became well-established as a technique for dissecting a scene into shots in American films.
Cutting plotter knives cut into a piece of material ( paper, mylar or vinyl ) that is lying on the flat surface area of the plotter.
Cutting the wedding cake is often turned into a ritual, complete with sharing a symbolic bite of the cake in a rite that harks back to the pagan confarreatio weddings in ancient Rome.
Seventy acres of the Leake, later Norton property, extending north from 42nd to 46th Street and from Broadway to the river, had been purchased before 1807 by John Jacob Astor and William Cutting, who held it before dividing it into building lots as the district became more suburban.
Cutting is the most common artificial vegetative propagation method, where pieces of the " parent " plant are removed and placed in a suitable environment so that they can grow into a whole new plant, the " clone ", which is genetically identical to the parent.
The station and the square form part of a ‘ gold route ’ that leads passengers through the square past the ' Cutting Edge ' water feature, up Howard Street and into the Heart of the City.
Cutting is the separation of a physical object, or a portion of a physical object, into two or more portions, through the application of an acutely directed force.
* Chair, Howard League's Commission of Inquiry into Violence in Penal Institutions for Young People ( the final report, Banged Up, Beaten Up, Cutting Up, published in 1995 )
The multinational phenomenon of Female Genital Cutting ( FGC ), exemplifies the necessity for an anthropologist to account for relative cultural contexts, " The work of scholars who stress the fundamental importance of offering perspectives on cultural factors that promote the practice of female genital cutting has brought the debate surrounding cultural relativism into sharp focus.
Cutting this length of clay into even lengths and laying them on top of each other and re-rolling forms lacework.
Cutting portraits, generally in profile, from black card became popular in the mid-18th century, though the term “ silhouette ” was seldom used until the early decades of the 19th century, and the tradition has continued under this name into the 21st century.
Mountain Straight, a gentle climb, leads into Griffin's Bend, an off-camber right-hander which then leads into The Cutting ( a sharp left-handed and steeply inclined corner ).
Cutting out a slot, often with the use of a router, and situating the box into it with an epoxy or resin at the end of the shaping process.
Cutting is perhaps best known as a prominent Anglo who sought to bring Hispanic voters into the political mainstream prior to the New Deal, and for maintaining correspondence with the controversial poet Ezra Pound in the 1930s.
Cutting into the field from his wide position, Kahlenberg managed to become Brøndby's 2004 – 05 league top goalscorer with 13 goals, leading the club in winning The Double.
Cutting and pieces
* Cutting off of larger pieces of tissue with a snare device ( e. g. polyps, endoscopic mucosal resection )
Cutting and its
Cutting diamond requires specialized knowledge, tools, equipment, and techniques because of its extreme difficulty.
The original Westbrook farm on the boundary between East Islip and Oakdale, near the Bayard Cutting Arboretum, has ceased operations and its fields are now the home of East Islip Soccer, near the fields set aside for the Little League of the Islips.
It was originally called but its name was later changed to the more popular Kusanagi-no-Tsurugi (" Grass Cutting Sword ").
Cutting back purchases of the Navy ’ s DDG-1000 destroyer ( with its deficient missile defense system ) was a first step.
On “ Cutting ”, the experience of self damage takes the form of the music itself reflecting both pain and its overcoming, encapsulating the theme as though it is itself made of music, her tempos driving in sharp contrasting time like a cut.
Cutting off subventions would make it even harder for ESF to maintain its status as a good quality international school foundation.
Senator Cutting, inspired by the complaints of a constituent, opposed the change and attacked Section 305 it its entirety as " irrational, unsound, and un-American.
* The sculpture and its image are frequently referred to in the novel Cutting For Stone by Abraham Verghese.
* E-Vets: The Cutting Edge, a one-off documentary produced in 2004, updating what had happened to Alameda East and its veterinarians since the original series ended
The strip is written and illustrated by Charles Cutting and uses " The Dream Quest of Unknown Kadath " as its basis.
On Sunday May 29, 1988, KKBQ launched its first live nightclub broadcast " 93Q Live On The Cutting Edge " from Club 6400, a club that played a mix of industrial, new wave and goth music ; no top 40 was allowed.
1.501 seconds.