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Piercings and .
Piercings in specific positions have certain names.
Piercings through the glans of the penis include the ampallang, which passes horizontally, and the apadrayva, that passes vertically through the glans.
Piercings through the head, or the glans, are the genital piercings with the best-documented historical evidence.
Accompanying Bodgy is his work colleague Windy, a variant on Wendy with the exception to the Piercings in her right ear and her tongue ; and Dozy, a grey work truck who seems more in appearance like Lofty on the ' Bob the Builder ' series.
*: File: Apadravya & Pubic Surface Genital Piercings. jpg except on Apadravya

such and nose
The natural anatomical and physiological defensive features of the upper respiratory tract, such as the turbinates of the nose and the cilia of the trachea and larger bronchi, are capable of impinging out the larger particles to which we are ordinarily exposed in our daily existence.
These adapted traits are a very small component of the Homo sapiens genome, but include various characteristics such as skin color and nose form, in addition to internal characteristics such as the ability to breathe more efficiently at high altitudes.
Several out-of-place elements were included in the game, such as credit cards, a wizard turning player character Pit into an eggplant, and a large, moving nose that was meant to resemble composer Tanaka.
While at the station the officer also asks the defendant to perform certain psycho-physical tests such as the walk and turn, one leg stand or finger to nose test.
Examples of nasals in English are and, in words such as nose and mouth.
Sometimes, proverbs are important parts of poems, such as Paul Muldoon's " Symposium ", which begins " You can lead a horse to water but you can't make it hold its nose to the grindstone and hunt with the hounds.
Craig and Denton distinguish these feelings from the " classical emotions " such as love, fear and anger, which are elicited by environmental stimuli sensed through the nose, eyes and ears.
A snowman is created by making a man shaped figure out of snow – often using a large, shaped snowball for the body and a smaller snowball for the head which is often decorated with simple household items – traditionally including a carrot for a nose, and coal for eyes, nose and mouth ; occasionally including old clothes such as a top hat or scarf.
During the Gulf War of 1991, Sepecat Jaguar GR1A bombers of the Royal Air Force featured such Viz characters as Johnny Fartpants, the Fat Slags and Buster Gonad as nose art.
Others are specific to individual body parts, such as skin rashes, coughing, or a runny nose.
In Celtic areas, Mercury was sometimes portrayed with three heads or faces, and at Tongeren, Belgium, a statuette of Mercury with three phalli was found, with the extra two protruding from his head and replacing his nose ; this was probably because the number 3 was considered magical, making such statues good luck and fertility charms.
The 14-day period between the two rounds of voting was marked by demonstrations against Le Pen and slogans such as " Vote for the crook, not for the fascist " or " Vote with a clothespin on your nose ".
Successive rather minor cuts chopped off ears, nose, tongue, fingers, toes, and such before proceeding to grosser cuts that removed large collops of flesh from more sizable parts, e. g., thighs and shoulders.
Mild allergies like hay fever are very common in the human population and cause symptoms such as red eyes, itchiness, and runny nose, eczema, hives, or an asthma attack.
Lynne Truss stated that " Samuel Beckett spliced his way merrily through such novels as Molloy and Malone Dies, thumbing his nose at the semicolon all the way ," " James Joyce preferred the colon, as more authentically classical ; P. G. Wodehouse did an effortlessly marvellous job without it ; George Orwell tried to avoid the semicolon completely in Coming up for Air, ( 1939 )," " Martin Amis included just one semicolon in Money ( 1984 )," and " Umberto Eco was congratulated by an academic reader for using no semicolons in The Name of the Rose ( 1983 ).
For example, one would morph one face into another by marking key points on the first face, such as the contour of the nose or location of an eye, and mark where these same points existed on the second face.
The archetypal circus " seal " performing behaviors such as throwing and catching balls on its nose and clapping is almost always a sea lion.
Telltale signs of invisible ink, such as pen scratches from a sharp pen, roughness, or changed reflectivity of the paper ( either more dull or more shiny, usually from using undiluted ink ), can be obvious to a careful observer who simply makes use of strong light, a magnifying glass and his or her nose.
It is considered a classic of children's literature and has spawned many derivative works of art, such as Disney's 1940 animated movie of the same name, and commonplace ideas such as a liar's long nose.
Where target shooting accuracy is the prime consideration, some bullets such as the Sierra " Matchking " incorporate a cavity in the nose section.
But at the very moment when he uttered the words Eustace was struck between the shoulders with such force that blood gushed out from his mouth and nose and half dead he only made his escape with the aid of his followers ".

such and pin
In either case, the ideal value for the feedback resistors ( to give minimum offset voltage ) will be such that the two resistances in parallel roughly equal the resistance to ground at the non-inverting input pin.
Most revolvers made today have drop safeties ( such as firing pin blocks, hammer blocks, or transfer bars ) that prevent the firing pin from contacting the cartridge's primer unless the trigger is pulled, which correlates more closely to an intentional firing.
The reports at the time ( and since ) indicated that keeping the system light would require high temperature, densely packed designs, such as fast metal cooled reactors or hexagonal pin fueled, high temperature gas cooled reactors.
In a situational pin, moving the pinned piece out of the line of attack will result in a situation detrimental to the player of the pinned piece, such as a checkmate.
Another related machine is the pin router, a larger static version of the hand electric router but normally with a much more powerful motor and other features such as automatic template copying.
In English, voicing marks the difference of meaning in words such as " bin: pin ".
His most significant contribution to engineering was to accurately define the stresses and capabilities of a press fit joint, such as that seen in a dowel pin in a housing.
** with asynchronous interface, such as the 28 pin 32Kx8 chips ( usually named XXC256 ), and similar products up to 16 Mbit per chip
Very low-cost systems, such as some early home computers, would instead use the CPU to send the data through an output pin, using the so-called bit-banging technique.
When a " skinny " Dual In-line Pin package ( DIP ) integrated circuit ( such as a typical DIP-14 or DIP-16, which have a 0. 3 inch separation between the pin rows ) is plugged into a breadboard, the pins of one side of the chip are supposed to go into column E while the pins of the other side go into column F on the other side of the notch.
Micro ribbon 36 pin female, such as on printers and on some computers, particularly industrial equipment and early ( pre-1980s ) personal computers.
Some derive their name from the materials they were fashioned from, such as kugi-gata ( nail form ), hari-gata ( needle form ) and tantō-gata ( knife form ); others are named after the object to which they appear similar, such as hoko-gata ( spear form ), matsuba-gata ( pine-needle form ) while others were simply named after the object that was thrown, such as kankyuto ( piercing tool form ), kunai-gata ( utility tool form ), or teppan ( plate metal ) and biao ( pin ).
The process of picking pin / tumbler and wafer locks is concerned with causing the two sets of pins ( upper or driver pins and bottom pins ) to separate such that the cylinder will turn.
Like Duchamp's ' ready mades ' - manufactured objects which qualified as art because he chose to call them such, the most unremarkable and inappropriate items-a pin, a plastic clothes peg, a television component, a razor blade, a tampon-could be brought within the province of punk ( un ) fashion ... Objects borrowed from the most sordid of contexts found a place in punks ' ensembles ; lavatory chains were draped in graceful arcs across chests in plastic bin liners.
The Giants eventually played on the reputation to bolster fan support with promotions such as awarding the Croix de Candlestick pin to fans who stayed for the duration of extra-inning night games.
The centroid of a uniform two-dimensional lamina, such as ( a ) below, may be determined, experimentally, by using a plumbline and a pin to find the center of mass of a thin body of uniform density having the same shape.
The body is held by the pin inserted at a point near the body's perimeter, in such a way that it can freely rotate around the pin ; and the plumb line is dropped from the pin ( b ).
A witch's teat was said to be a mole or blemish somewhere on the body that was insensitive to touch ; discovery of such insensitive areas was considered de facto evidence of witchcraft, although in practice the witch's teat was usually insensitive by design, with examiners using secretly dulled needles to claim that the accused could not feel the prick of a pin.
The creation of such a pin was recommended in Sir Hayden Phillips ' review of the honours system in 2004 ,.

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