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confined and spaces
In Colombia, the traditional quartet includes a range of instruments too, from the small bandola ( sometimes known as the Deleuze-Guattari, for use when traveling or in confined rooms or spaces ), to the slightly larger tiple, to the full sized classical guitar.
Water mills found innumerable applications, especially in crushing ores to release the fine particles of gold and other heavy minerals, as well as working giant bellows to force air into the confined spaces of underground workings.
The presence of heavy equipment in confined spaces also poses a risk to miners, and despite modern improvements to safety practices, mining remains dangerous throughout the world.
Cave and wreck penetration divers sometimes carry cylinders slung at their sides instead, allowing them to swim through more confined spaces.
According to a separate U. S. Central Intelligence Agency study, “ the effect of an FAE explosion within confined spaces is immense.
Use of water in fire fighting should also take into account the hazards of a steam explosion, which may occur when water is used on very hot fires in confined spaces, and of a hydrogen explosion, when substances which react with water, such as certain metals or hot carbon such as coal, charcoal, coke graphite, decompose the water, producing water gas.
These devices were smaller than a ram and could be used in confined spaces.
Due to the confined spaces aboard-ship, Sherman grew close to Halleck and Ord, and in his Memoirs references a hike with Halleck to the summit of Corcovado, notable as the future spot of the Cristo Redentor statue.
Some practitioners argue that " texts " do not have to be confined to printed texts, but can include artifacts such as objects, physical spaces, and the like.
Slugs squeeze themselves into confined spaces such as under loose bark on trees or under stone slabs, logs or wooden boards lying on the ground.
* Situational type – Fear of small confined spaces ( claustrophobia ), or the dark ( nyctophobia ).
The Urban Search and Rescue Task Forces perform rescue of victims from structural collapses, confined spaces, and other disasters, for example mine collapses and earthquakes.
They are often built in confined spaces over, or close to, running water.
The art of escaping from restraints and confined spaces has been a skill employed by performers for a very long time.
Bullpups generally allow for a 25 % reduction in weapon length, which allows for better maneuverability in confined spaces.
However, waves can exist in plasmas or confined spaces, called plasma waves, which can be longitudinal, transverse, or a mixture of both.
They can be used when a full sized ladder is not required or when working in confined spaces.
Crevice corrosion is a localized form of corrosion occurring in confined spaces ( crevices ), to which the access of the working fluid from the environment is limited.
Seams on the arms of the jacket run along the backside of the pattern, so as not to interfere with movement of the arms along the sides of the torso in confined spaces.
* In aerial lifts, bucket trucks, buried trenches, and confined spaces
* People who spend time in confined spaces with other people, including occupants of homeless shelters and warming centers, prison inmates, military recruits in basic training, and individuals who spend considerable time in changerooms or gyms.
While less convenient than compression joints and less reliable than flux solder joints, they are useful when fitting in confined spaces and where single handed fitting is required.
Since venting hot gases to the rear can be dangerous in confined spaces, some recoilless guns such as the Armbrust and MATADOR use a combination of a countershot, smoothbore barrel and pistons to avoid both recoil and back blast.
Bill money to pay for Typing School, but felt he was unable to work in an office as he hated working in confined spaces.

confined and people
# the Ambrosian, now confined to Milan, where it owes its retention to the attachment of the clergy and people to their traditionary rites, which they derive from St Ambrose.
* God " dwelleth in the hearts of his obedient people ": religious experience is not confined to a church building.
Initially confined to the immigrant communities during the mid-19th century, it was gradually assimilated into mainstream society and by the first decade of the 20th century it was being celebrated coast to coast by people of all social, racial and religious backgrounds.
At the same time, people are prepared to expose themselves in acts of physical intimacy, but these are confined to exposure in circumstances and of persons of their choosing.
* U. S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants ' Campaign to End Refugee Warehousing in refugee camps around the world, people are confined to their settlement and denied their basic rights.
Slang lexicographer Jonathon Green said that " 404 " as a slang term had been driven by the " influence of technology " and young people, but at the time, such usage was relatively confined to London and other urban areas.
Most of the present-day consumption is confined to older generations, mostly people above 50.
It is a sad fact that the perpetration of those acts is not confined to that class of people which might be called the rabble.
Costello took the opportunity to reconfirm his beliefs in Catholicism on 12 April 1951, in his speech on Dr. Browne's resignation: " I have no hesitation in saying that we, as a Government, representing a people, the overwhelming majority of whom are of the one faith, who have a special position in the Constitution, when we are given advice or warnings by the authoritative people in the Catholic Church, on matters strictly confined to faith and morals, so long as I am here — and I am sure I speak for my colleagues — will give to their directions, given within that scope — and I have no doubt that they do not desire in the slightest to go one fraction of an inch outside the sphere of faith and morals — our complete obedience and allegiance.
There are obvious risks associated with an entire group of people all wielding swords, while confined within a small ritual circle space nine feet in diameter ; this safety factor, as well as ease of use, may explain why the emphasis within Wicca is more on each witch's personal athame, rather than the ritual sword.
Contemporary usage of the designation is generally confined to situations in which the term is considered relevant in an historical context, as now most people of mixed white and black ancestry rarely choose to self-identify as mulatto.
Tocqueville considered the separate spheres of women and men a positive development, stating: " As for myself, I do not hesitate to avow that although the women of the United States are confined within the narrow circle of domestic life, and their situation is in some respects one of extreme dependence, I have nowhere seen women occupying a loftier position ; and if I were asked, (...) to what the singular prosperity and growing strength of that people ought mainly to be attributed, I should reply ,— to the superiority of their women.
In the Swedish Empire, all lands conquered became provinser ( provinces ); Swedish law, which granted the common people much more freedom and influence than any other European law at the time, was not extended to them, remaining confined to the landskap ( in plural ) which made up the Swedish-and-Finnish heartland ( roughly corresponding to present-day Sweden and Finland ).
These are often regional, associated with the older generations or confined to a specific holiday ( for example, mämmi in Easter or most Christmas dishes ), and most people eat them rarely or not at all.
He wrote about many cultures throughout the globe in detail because, as he himself said, he didn't like the way history was taught in schools where it was confined to the history of a single country and that too narrow, and he wanted his daughter Priyadarshini to know why people did what they did.
Furthermore, because of the large number of bombs in the confined area of Belfast city centre, people evacuated from the site of one bomb were mistakenly moved into the vicinity of other bombs.
Folklore about such spirits is not confined to the Sami people but is a part of Finnish mythology and tradition as a whole.
In claustrophobic people, this translates as panicking or overreacting to a situation in which the person finds themselves physically confined.
Six such camps were set up in Petrozavodsk, with about 25, 000 women, children and old people confined in them.
Only two deaths were known at first, though several people were missing ; and, while the flames were confined to the Baldwin, smoke and water damaged the adjoining structures.
However, high rates of mortality from these diseases, formerly confined to the elderly and malnourished, are now common among HIV-infected young and middle-aged people, including well-educated members of the middle class.
Much of the film's appeal lies in its surreal, Kafkaesque settings ; no extensive attempt is made to explain what the cube is that the characters are confined in, why it was created, or how the people were selected to be put inside there, and the movie remains without any answers.

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