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work and on
When, in late afternoon on the last day in June, he saw two people top the ridge to the south and walk toward the house, he quit work immediately and strode to his rifle.
`` I've been mucking in a mine in the San Juan, but I used to work on a ranch.
`` My dress needs some work on it ''.
He'd started a fire and put coffee on, and now was busy at the work board of his chuck wagon.
The only drawback now to the plan he'd decided on was that someone else might fail to do his work, too, and the teacher would have that person stay late along with Jack.
It is worth dwelling in some detail on the crisis of this story, because it brings together a number of characteristic elements and makes of them a curious, riddling compound obscurely but centrally significant for Mann's work.
His next major work, completed in 1892, was a long fantastic epic in prose, entitled Hans Alienus, which Professor Book describes as a monument on the grave of his carefree and indolent youth.
But a writer who has a taste for irony and who sees incest in all its modern dimensions can let his imagination work on the disturbing joke in the incest myth, the joke that strikes right at the center of man's humanness.
Then she rounded on Weston and cried, `` You always did Wright's dirty work!!
Supposing you or I were being accused in this manner, and yet we were doing our level best to carry on our work.
Though they would produce some very memorable and lasting songs, Arlen and Mercer were not given strong material to work on.
And I was to go to work on that odd matter.
Like his volume on Wycliffe, the work was accompanied by the publication of a selected group of documents, in this case illustrative of the history of Queen Anne's reign down to 1707.
Lewis was spending his mornings, with the help of two secretaries, on the galleys of that long novel, making considerable revisions, and the combination of hard work and hard frivolity exhausted him once more, so that he was compelled to spend three days in the Harbor Sanatorium in the last week of January.
Like ours, the economy of the space merchants must constantly expand in order to survive, and, like ours, it is based on the principle of `` ever increasing everybody's work and profits in the circle of consumption ''.
Pohl and Kornbluth's ad men have long since thrown out appeals to reason and developed techniques of advertising which tie in with `` every basic trauma and neurosis in American life '', which work on the libido of consumers, which are linked to the `` great prime motivations of the human spirit ''.
The work week of attendants who are on duty 65 hours and more per week should be reduced.
But as the more concrete plans for the work of the Council gradually became known, there was a rather sharp and abrupt disappointment on all sides.
Laudably enough, it is offering classics and off-beat imports, but last week only one U.S. original was on the boards, Robert D. Hock's stunning Civil War work, Borak.
One day, Ching had told him ( smiling, patting him on the back ) as they walked to the weekly conference of squad leaders, `` Keep it up, your squad is good, one of the best, keep it up, keep up the good work ''.
`` Argiento, this is senseless '', he complained, not liking to work on the wet floors, particularly in cold weather.
Kate drew more and more on her affection for Joel through the hot days of summer work.
She was told by the manservant who opened the door that his lordship was engaged on work from which he had left strict orders he was not to be disturbed.
Ejaculated the surprised woman, looking at Alex for an explanation but he, parting from her without ceremony, only offered a few words about the doctor's provincial American speech and a state of nerves brought on by the demands of his work.
`` How you going to work with a child hanging on you ''??

work and kinetic
Heat of condensation ( work function ) plus kinetic energy of the electrons impinging on the anode.
When a projectile is thrown by hand, the speed of the projectile is determined by the kinetic energy imparted by the thrower's muscles performing work.
In this period the correct expression for kinetic energy, ½mv < sup > 2 </ sup >, and its relation to mechanical work became established.
During the following years Coriolis worked to extend the notion of kinetic energy and work to rotating systems.
A hammer is basically a force amplifier that works by converting mechanical work into kinetic energy and back.
Since the energy of the photoelectrons emitted is exactly the energy of the incident photon minus the material's work function or binding energy, the work function of a sample can be determined by bombarding it with a monochromatic X-ray source or UV source, and measuring the kinetic energy distribution of the electrons emitted.
In this work, Bernoulli posited the argument, still used to this day, that gases consist of great numbers of molecules moving in all directions, that their impact on a surface causes the gas pressure that we feel, and that what we experience as heat is simply the kinetic energy of their motion.
Blade efficiency () can be defined as the ratio of the work done on the blades to kinetic energy supplied to the fluid, and is given by
Muscles ( or other actuators in non-living systems ) do physical work, adding kinetic energy to the jumper's body over the course of a jump's propulsive phase.
Ibn Rushd defined and measured force as " the rate at which work is done in changing the kinetic condition of a material body " and correctly argued " that the effect and measure of force is change in the kinetic condition of a materially resistant mass ".
Around the same time period, Ron Resch patented some tessellation patterns as part of his explorations into kinetic sculpture and developable surfaces, although his work was not known by the origami community until the 1980s.
While kinetic inhibitors work by slowing down the kinetics of the nucleation, anti-agglomerants do not stop the nucleation, they rather stop the agglomeration ( sticking together ) of gas hydrate crystals.
* 1776-John Smeaton publishes a paper on experiments relating power, work, momentum and kinetic energy, and supporting the conservation of energy
* 1776 – John Smeaton publishes a paper on experiments related to power, work, momentum, and kinetic energy, supporting the conservation of energy
* 1820 – John Herapath develops some ideas in the kinetic theory of gases but mistakenly associates temperature with molecular momentum rather than kinetic energy ; his work receives little attention other than from Joule
* 1856 – August Krönig publishes an account of the kinetic theory of gases, probably after reading Waterston's work
Generally, a gas behaves more like an ideal gas at higher temperature and lower density ( i. e. lower pressure ), as the work performed by intermolecular forces becomes less significant compared with the particles ' kinetic energy, and the size of the molecules becomes less significant compared to the empty space between them.
where E < sub > binding </ sub > is the binding energy ( BE ) of the electron, E < sub > photon </ sub > is the energy of the X-ray photons being used, E < sub > kinetic </ sub > is the kinetic energy of the electron as measured by the instrument and φ is the work function of the spectrometer ( not the material ).
The collaboration lasted from 1852 to 1856, its discoveries including the Joule-Thomson effect, and the published results did much to bring about general acceptance of Joule's work and the kinetic theory.
He had also been one of the few people receptive to the neglected work of John Herapath on the kinetic theory of gases.
If the person in the chair pulls the weights towards them, they are doing work and their rotational kinetic energy increases.

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