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Snatching and from
Snatching the boy from the streets and delivering him back to his saviors, Ketch was not surprised to see his brother, Johnny Blaze, and his Caretaker already in their company.
Hawkins later revealed in an interview with MTV Germany that he intended to call the album Snatching Defeat from the Jaws of Victory.

Snatching and with
Snatching a Siliton crystal, Galaxon recharges Jerrok, who saves himself and holds off the rock creatures while the humans recharge the other Robotix and interface with the nearest ones they can find.
Bonzo ’ s film career launched in 1924 at the Marble Arch Pavilion with the premier of the first of 26 cartoons, “ Sausage Snatching Sensation .”

Snatching and .
In 2001 Fitzgerald married American actor-director John Sharian, who directed her in The Snatching of Bookie Bob.
In 2005, he appeared as Leon Bank in Snuff-Movie, and he also played the role of Bob Snatcher in the short film Snatching Time.

lantern and from
A lantern hung from a peg, giving light.
A match flared, and he reached above his head to light a lantern which hung from a wire loop.
Even the `` history of furniture '' can hardly be taught exclusively from photographs and lantern slides.
* Archival collection of America the Beautiful lantern slides from the 1930s.
Many cultures have built devices that travel through the air, from the earliest projectiles such as stones and spears, the boomerang in Australia, the hot air Kongming lantern, and kites.
Violet light represents love, and the lantern corp that draws power from it are the Star Sapphire.
We can also let the light be " artificial ", as if it issues from a lantern held by the observer.
Uncle Tom, from an 1885 magic lantern series.
The parish church of Saint Botolph is known locally as The Stump and is renowned for its lantern interior and 52 misericords. St Botolph's Church, Boston | The Stump, viewed from the Market Place.
The entire chewing organ was known as Aristotle's lantern ( image ), from Aristotle's description in his History of Animals:
In reality the mouth-apparatus of the urchin is continuous from one end to the other, but to outward appearance it is not so, but looks like a horn lantern with the panes of horn left out.
The cauldron that traditionally flames continuously from the opening until the closing ceremony was temporarily extinguished ( The flame itself was transferred to a lantern ) prior to the athletics events while the cauldron was moved to the southern side of the stadium.
The code name for the SDDS project was " Green Lantern ", taken from the name of the comic book hero and the old term of " magic lantern " used to describe the original projected pictures in the late 19th century.
By day it is easily distinguishable from other coastal lighthouses by its white color and black lantern.
The bells, protruding from the open lantern, were made by Pieter van den Ghein in 1566 and still ring out a short melody every 15 minutes.
Automation in the modern context began in the early 1980s, made possible firstly by the construction of lantern top helipads at remote rock lighthouses, to enable the rapid transfer of technicians to a lighthouse in the event of a breakdown, and secondly, by the development of remote control technology, which enables all lighthouses and lightvessels to be monitored and controlled from the Trinity House Operations and Planning Centre, in Harwich, Essex.
The octagonal lantern tower at the top, when looked at from the east or west side, appears to be further over to the nave side of the tower than the other, which looks rather odd when viewed from the right angle.
Some figures appear to be detailed transcriptions and tracings from the photographs by some device like a magic lantern, which Eakins took pains to cover up with oil paint.
For example, Tankō Bushi is a coal mining work song that originates from Miike Mine in Kyushu, and the movements in the dance depict digging, cart pushing and lantern hanging.
Many domes, particularly those from the Renaissance and Baroque periods of architecture, are crowned by a lantern or cupola, a Medieval innovation which not only serves to admit light and vent air, but gives an extra dimension to the decorated interior of the dome.
Its long nave is covered by four stone domes on pendentives, springing from French pointed arches, the last of which covers the crossing and is surmounted by a stone lantern.
Eight hammer vaults extend from eight piers over the 22 meter wide octagonal crossing and meet at the base of a large octagonal lantern, which is covered by a star vault.
If an external lantern tower was removed from Pisa Cathedral in the 1300s, exposing the dome, one reason may have been to stay current with more recent projects in the region, such as the domed cathedrals of Siena and Florence.

lantern and its
He shouldered the blanket again, backed off, and tossed the lantern with its open wick beneath the wagon.
Used vertically, a measurement of the angle between the lantern of a lighthouse of known height and the sea level at its base can also be used for distance off.
After some hesitation, he apprehensively entered the cave, and explored its depths with the aid of a lantern.
The gas lantern was turned with a lever at its base so that the appropriate light faced traffic.
His lantern wheel had a recorded height of, the frame of which was draped in brocades and silk gauze, adorned with gold and jade jewelry, and when it had its total of some 50, 000 oil cups lit the radiance of it could be seen for miles.
An alternative to fuel or oil-based lanterns is the Uday lantern, developed by Philips as part of its Lighting Africa project ( sponsored by the World Bank Group ).
The hot-blast design, also known as a " tubular lantern " due to the round metal tubes used in its construction, was invented by John Irwin and patented on January 12, 1868.
The term jack-o '- lantern is in origin a term for an ignis fatuus or will-o '- the-wisp in English folklore, used especially in East Anglia, its the earliest known use dating to the 1660s.
The maisons were required to light a red lantern when they were open ( from which is derived the term red-light district ) and the prostitutes were only permitted to leave the maisons on certain days and only if accompanied by its head.
There are a number of attestations of the bindrune or ( the " lantern rune ", similar in shape to the Anglo-Saxon Gēr rune ), but its identification is disputed in most cases, since the same sign may also be a mirror rune of Wynn or Thurisaz.
Omphalotus olearius, commonly known as the jack-o '- lantern mushroom, is an orange-to yellow-gill mushroom that to an untrained eye appears similar to some chanterelles, and is most notable for its bioluminescent properties.
At night, it is recognizable by its unique rainbow lantern.
UC Berkeley ’ s Architecture Library acquires its first lantern slide, the tree of architecture, made from Banister Fletcher ’ s book, A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method
This is a lantern in the shape of a golden dragon, spiraling up a 27-meter-high pole, spewing fireworks from its mouth.
The garden has been the subject of more than fifteen years ' study by a UBC professor, who believes that its construction hides a number of impressive features, including references to Japanese philosophy and mythology, shadow bridges visible only at certain times of year, and positioning of a lantern that is filled with light at the exact date and time of Nitobe's death each year.
By 1906 a crack, through and around the top of the tower, directly under the lantern requires its demolition.
This had been the tradition until at least 1514, when Trinity House took over such duties for coastal towns and village's to display some kind of beacon on the high points of their coastline as a warning against the potential hazard's locally known to shipping, thus in medieval times the Chapel of St. Mary was known as " The Chapel of Blue Light ", for its light was given out into the dark seas through a blue glass lantern.
The lantern was above sea level but very high seas obscured its light.
Burrell was aware of the younger brother-in-law of Milsom reportedly having a toy lantern, but understood he could not question him or other members of the family about it without tipping them off about its significance.
Physalis alkekengi ( Bladder cherry, Chinese lantern, Japanese lantern, or Winter cherry ; Japanese: hōzuki ), is a relative of P. peruviana ( Cape Gooseberry ), easily identifiable by the larger, bright orange to red papery covering over its fruit, which resemble Chinese lanterns.

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