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Page "Pag (town)" ¶ 11
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longitudinal and transversal
While the Dome of the Rock gives clear reference in plan-and partially in decoration-to byzantine art, the plan of the Umayyad Mosque has also a remarkable similarity with the 6th-7th c. normal Christian basilicas, but it has been modified and expanded on the transversal axis and not on the normal longitudinal axis as in the Christian basilicas.
* longitudinal transversal reaction struts ;
( Actually one uses an effective sonic velocity, i. e. the Debye temperature ( see below ) is proportional to, more precisely, where one distinguishes longitudinal and transversal sound-wave velocities ( contributions 1 / 3 and 2 / 3, respectively ).
In certain professional motorsport classifications, such as the Grand Touring categories promoted by the FIA, the GT car is defined as " an open or closed automobile which has no more than one door on each side and a minimum of two seats situated one on each side of the longitudinal centre line of the car ; these two seats must be crossed by the same transversal plane.
A third example is the SAAB XWD ( Haldex Generation 4 ) with eLSD, it uses a common ( electronically controlled via the vehicle computer network ) hydraulic power pack to control both the longitudinal and transversal torque transfer of the XWD system.
The main street and the transversal connections above the Dravinja are lined with longitudinal or transversally positioned one-storey secular houses with well preserved Gothic cores and Renaissance additions.
The FIA defines a GT car as " an open or closed automobile which has no more than one door on each side and a minimum of two seats situated one on each side of the longitudinal centre line of the car ; these two seats must be crossed by the same transversal plane.

longitudinal and streets
The old town was nearly square, with two large longitudinal streets that are intersected by three cross streets.
There were two wide longitudinal streets that could be used for markets and fairs.
Other longitudinal streets were laid out parallel to the main street at intervals of 55 meters.
The main settlement at Ollantaytambo has an orthogonal layout with four longitudinal streets crossed by seven parallel streets.
The wooden houses were clustered around the two longitudinal and three cross streets, but a town square or other large, open space was missing.

longitudinal and latter
The term was then replaced by mood disorder, as the latter term refers to the underlying or longitudinal emotional state, whereas the former refers to the external expression observed by others.
The latter become massive and their new, longitudinal polarization is provided by the Goldstone boson.
The term was then replaced by mood disorder, as the latter term refers to the underlying or longitudinal emotional state, whereas the former refers to the external expression observed by others.
Both longitudinal and transverse faults and related fracture zones play a role in guiding groundwater flow ; the latter guide flow across the strike of major plicative dislocations, from the central sector toward the Black Sea.
The latter, or dorsal shield, extends over the back in fairly regular longitudinal rows and quite regular transverse rows.
A straight leading edge may be swept or unswept, the latter meaning that it is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the aircraft.
Ampulla contain both circular muscles and longitudinal muscle, whereas the podia contain the latter only.

longitudinal and known
In his longitudinal study of gifted children, who became known as the Termites, Terman found that gifted children become gifted adults.
The large intestine differs in physical form from the small intestine in being much wider and in showing the longitudinal layer of the muscularis have been reduced to 3 strap-like structures known as the taeniae coli.
The outer longitudinal layer of the colon thins out into 3 discontinuous longitudinal bands, known as tiniae coli ( bands of the colon ).
It also contains circular and longitudinal smooth muscle which helps to move food along by a process known as peristalsis.
The lower part of the medulla, immediately lateral to the fasciculus cuneatus, is marked by another longitudinal elevation known as the tuberculum cinereum.
These standing waves form a discrete set of frequencies, known as the longitudinal modes of the cavity.
The corpus callosum ( Latin: tough body ), also known as the colossal commissure, is a wide, flat bundle of neural fibers beneath the cortex in the eutherian brain at the longitudinal fissure.
The stomach twists around the longitudinal axis of the digestive tract, also known as volvulus.
Disparities in temperature also drive a set of longitudinal circulation cells, and the overall atmospheric motion is known as the zonal overturning circulation.
The Tank, Infantry, Mk IV ( A22 ) was a heavy British infantry tank used in the Second World War, best known for its heavy armour, large longitudinal chassis with all-around tracks with multiple bogies, and its use as the basis of many specialist vehicles.
It is known as the hoop stress and is twice the value of the longitudinal stress which occurs along the length of the cylinder.
An Igor's expertise in human surgery also extends to the veterinary world ; there is known to be one horse in Ankh-Morpork, owned by Hobson's livery stables ( which employs an Igor ), with a longitudinal seam extending the entire circumference of the animal, sewn together from the remains of a particularly nasty collision.
In automotive engineering, toe, also known as tracking, is the symmetric angle that each wheel makes with the longitudinal axis of the vehicle, as a function of static geometry, and kinematic and compliant effects.
He is best known as the inventor of the Stanford-Binet IQ test and the initiator of the longitudinal study of children with high IQs called the Genetic Studies of Genius.
The discovery caused an international sensation, as it represented the only then known copy of a world map of Christopher Columbus ( 1451 – 1506 ), and was the only 16th century map that showed South America in its proper longitudinal position in relation to Africa.
In the hesperornithiform lineage they were of a different arrangement than in any other known bird ( or in non-avian theropod dinosaurs ), with the teeth sitting in a longitudinal groove rather than in individual sockets, in a notable case of convergent evolution with mosasaurs.
Retraction requires the contraction of two internal longitudinal muscles, known as the sternoglossi.
This problem is composed of three parts: the known diffusion equation ( chosen as constant ), an advective component ( which means the system is evolving in space due to a velocity field ), which we choose to be a constant Ux, and a lateral interaction between longitudinal channels ( k ).
But, the plasma medium acts as the most efficient transformer ( currently known ) of the transverse field of an electromagnetic wave into longitudinal fields of a plasma wave.
To suppress the " unphysical " longitudinal and time-like polarization states, which are not observed in experiments at classical distance scales, one must also employ auxiliary constraints known as Ward identities.
This is known as a longitudinal four because the crankshaft is in line with the direction of travel of the motorcycle.
The falx cerebri, also known as the cerebral falx, so named from its sickle-like form, is a strong, arched fold of dura mater that descends vertically in the longitudinal fissure between the cerebral hemispheres.

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