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Page "Winemaking" ¶ 27
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Some Related Sentences

For and red
For several months now, Jack Carter, a big overgrown boy of fifteen with a fuzzy, pimpled face and greenish catlike eyes with a lot of red in them, had been haunted by a dream, a vision, of a Woman.
For example, in a typical store installation, fifty 24-in. and six 36-in. red acrylic letters were mounted against a white painted wood background.
( For instance, see Example 2 of Section 5-5, on red cards in hands of 5.
For example the standard glutamic acid ( glutamate ) and the non-standard gamma-amino acid gamma-amino-butyric acid ( GABA ) are respectively the brain's main excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmitters, hydroxyproline-a major component of the connective tissue collagen-is synthesised from proline, the standard amino acid glycine is used to synthesise porphyrins used in red blood cells, and the non-standard carnitine is used in lipid transport.
For some applications, a single alpha channel is not sufficient: a stained-glass window, for instance, requires a separate transparency channel for each RGB channel to model the red transparency, green transparency, and blue transparency.
For example, many different things can be red.
For example, bundle theory regards an apple as red, four inches ( 100 mm ) wide, and juicy but lacking an underlying substance.
For example, redness and juiciness are found on top of the table because redness and juiciness inhere in an apple, making the apple red and juicy.
For more than half a century the Lions have been synonymous with the red jersey that sports the amalgamated crests of the four unions.
For 1908, the National League club returned to wearing red trim, but the American League team finally had an official nickname, and would remain the " Red Sox " for good.
For example spermatozoa and avian red blood cells have more tightly packed chromatin than most eukaryotic cells and trypanosomatid protazoa do not condense their chromatin into visible chromosomes for mitosis.
For example, the abstract general idea or concept that is designated by the word " red " is that characteristic which is common to apples, cherries, and blood.
For Atlanta, a new GM Goodwrench scheme was introduced, with angled red stripes and a thin blue pinstripe, resembling the Childress AC Delco Chevrolets driven in the Busch Series.
For example, an image may have areas of colour that do not change over several pixels ; instead of coding " red pixel, red pixel, ..." the data may be encoded as " 279 red pixels ".
For instance, the database might indicate that a car that was originally " red " might fade to " pink " in time, provided it was of some particular " make " with an inferior paint job.
For example, to believe that the sky is blue is to think that the proposition " The sky is blue " is true even if the sky is visibly red.
For example, the sentence " The coat is red " has no observer, the sentence " We see the coat as red " ( where " we " indicates observers ) appears more specific in context as regards light waves and colour as determined by modern science, that is, colour results from a reaction in the human brain.
The red dot overtakes two green dots when moving from the left to the right of the figure. New waves seem to emerge at the back of a wave group, grow in amplitude until they are at the center of the group, and vanish at the wave group front. For surface gravity waves, the water particle velocities are much smaller than the phase velocity, in most cases.
For example, ruby is the red variety of the species corundum, while any other color of corundum is considered sapphire.
For example " This ' a ' is ' b '" ( e. g. " This ' object a ' is ' red '") really means "' object a ' is a sense-datum " and "' red ' is a sense-datum ", and they " stand in relation " to one another and in relation to " I ".
For much of Liverpool's history its home colours have been all red, but when the club was founded its kit was more like the contemporary Everton kit.

For and winemaking
For people who grow grapes for winemaking, see: Category: Viticulturists.
For example, emigrants from Prussia in the mid 1850s were important in establishing South Australia's Barossa Valley as a winemaking region.

For and stems
For example, probably very few people know that the word `` visrhanik '' that is bantered about so much today stems from the verb `` bouanahsha '': to salivate.
For Yokuts, I tabulated these 71 items in five columns, according as they were expressed by 1, 2, 3, 4, and more than 4 stems.
For Athabascan, with a greater range of stems, the first two of five corresponding columns were identical, 1 and 2 stems ; ;
For example, air hoar is a deposit of hoar frost on objects above the surface, such as tree branches, plant stems, wires ; surface hoar is formed by fernlike ice crystals directly deposited on snow, ice or already frozen surfaces ; crevasse hoar consists of crystals that form in glacial crevasses where water vapour can accumulate under calm weather conditions ; depth hoar refers to cup shaped, faceted crystals formed within dry snow, beneath the surface.
For example, their default point of reference in time ( expressed by bare verb stems ) is not the present moment, but the past.
For example, one Nadsat term which may seem like an English composition, horrorshow, actually stems from the Russian word for " good "; khorosho, which sounds similar to horrorshow.
For certain applications the valve stem and disk are made of different steel alloys, or the valve stems may be hollow and filled with sodium to improve heat transport and transfer.
For example, in letters p and q, the top strokes of counters do not touch the top of the stems in Light, Bold, Heavy fonts, but touch the top of the stems in Book, Medium fonts.
For instance, in his translation of Torquato Tasso's " Aminta ", published in 1580, Zlatarić's purist tendencies led to mistakes: the hero's name Aminta becomes in Croatian Ljubmir ( Lover ) because Zlatarić wrongly assumed that the name " Aminta " stems from Latin amare (" to love "), while in fact it is from Ancient Greek ( amýnō, " to defend ").
For much of the year, the plant appears to be an arrangement of large spiny dead sticks, although closer examination reveals that the stems are partly green.
For others, it stems from an attraction to more worldly people whose smoking epitomizes their strength and self-confidence.
For example, a step in a botanical key may ask about the color of flowers, or the disposition of the leaves along the stems.
For the nouns and adjectives that have two vowel stems, the weak vowel stem comes from the genitive singular.
For example, in Jabo, most stems are monosyllabic.
For Connor, everything stems from this place with Angel and Holtz, and when we got the opportunity for him to let that out, I think he came out of his tough shell and showed a little bit of his sensitivity.
For Collier, the immorality of the title stems from Restoration comedy ’ s lack of poetic justice.
" For instance, although the marginal productivity theory — the idea that payments to factors of production equilibrate to their marginal productivity — had been laid out by others such as John Bates Clark, Wicksell presented a far simpler and more robust demonstration of the principle, and much of the present conception of that theory stems from Wicksell's model.
For this purpose, they use objective style markers such as vocabulary richness and lengths of words, word stems and suffixes, and employ statistical methods to measure their changes over time.
For example, in Modern Hebrew, the XiXéX verb-template is much more productive than the XaXáX verb-template because in morphemic adaptations of non-Hebrew stems, the XiXéX verb-template is more likely to retain – in all conjugations throughout the tenses – the prosodic structure ( e. g., the consonant clusters and the location of the vowels ) of the stem.
Country supergroup Alabama surpassed James ' record in 1985 with their 17th No. 1 song, " Forty Hour Week ( For a Livin ')", but the dispute stems from their 1982 Christmas single, " Christmas in Dixie ".
For certain applications the stems of automotive poppet valves may be hollow and filled with sodium to improve heat transport and transfer.

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