Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Fireworks" ¶ 32
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

most and firework
In some areas, particularly in Sussex, there are extensive processions, large bonfires and firework displays organised by local bonfire societies, the most elaborate of which take place in Lewes.
The most common use of a firework is as part of a fireworks display.
The firework display was synchronised to an edit of " Seduction " which also featured a collage of samples from some of Britain's most famous pop and rock songs, plus classical composers.
The cartoons are infamous for some of the most violent cartoon gags ever devised in theatrical animation, such as Jerry slicing Tom in half, shutting his head in a window or a door, Tom using everything from axes, firearms, explosives, traps and poison to try to murder Jerry, Jerry stuffing Tom's tail in a waffle iron and a mangle, kicking him into a refrigerator, plugging his tail into an electric socket, pounding him with a mace, club or mallet, causing a tree or an electric pole to drive him into the ground, sticking matches into his feet and lighting them, tying him to a firework and setting it off, and so on.
Cakes are one of the most popular types of firework, as they can create spectacular and long-lasting effects from a single ignition while minimising safety concern.
The group won the 1st edition of the Malta International Fireworks Festival in 2006 and brought the most important honour in the villages history when it won the Caput Lucis Fireworks World Championships in 2007 in Valmontone a province of Rome in Italy after competing with 7 of the world's most successful firework companies.

most and rockets
Chemical rockets are the most common type of rocket and they typically create their exhaust by the combustion of rocket propellant.
Air-to-air missiles largely replaced guns and rockets in the early 1960s since both were believed unusable at the speeds being attained, however the Vietnam War showed that guns still had a role to play and most fighters built since then are fitted with cannon ( typically between 20 and 30 mm in caliber ) as an adjunct to missiles.
Political and environmental considerations make it unlikely such an engine will be used in the foreseeable future, since nuclear thermal rockets would be most useful at or near the Earth's surface and the consequences of a malfunction could be disastrous.
Chemical rockets are the most common type of rocket and they typically create their exhaust by the combustion of rocket propellant.
Amongst liquid-fueled rockets, complexity can be influenced by how much hardware must be lightweight, like pressure-fed engines can have two orders of magnitude lesser part count than pump-fed engines but lead to more weight by needing greater tank pressure, most often used in just small maneuvering thrusters as a consequence.
( Such contrasts to chemical rockets where propulsive efficiency varies with the ratio of exhaust velocity to vehicle velocity at the time, but near maximum obtainable specific impulse tends to be a design goal when corresponding to the most energy released from reacting propellants ).
* Gimballed thrust, the most common thrust system in modern rockets
SSTO rockets could simply carry two sets of engines, but this would mean the spacecraft would be carrying one or the other set " turned off " for most of the flight.
Such rocket technology has also been used for the delivery of mail by rocket and is used as propulsion for most model rockets.
The most common and only types on the market for the general public in Sweden are rockets and cakes with a caliber of up to 49 mm.
However, some rockets use toxic propellants, and most vehicles use propellants that are not carbon neutral.
Splash damage is most commonly dealt by explosive weapons such as grenades or rockets, or magic damage from the casting of spells in fantasy games.
A gun stands right in its way, between the wheels of which the shell in the head of the rocket bursts, the gunners fall right and left … our rocketeers kept shooting off rockets, none of which ever followed the course of the first ; most of them, on arriving about the middle of the ascent, took a vertical direction, whilst some actually turned back upon ourselves-and one of these, following me like a squib until its shell exploded, actually put me in more danger than all the fire of the enemy throughout the day.
This is not the case for most rockets however, where the rocket propellant is the working mass, as well as the energy source.
The Hubble Space Telescope and FUSE have been the most recent major space telescopes to view the near and far UV spectrum of the sky, though other UV instruments have flown on sounding rockets and the Space Shuttle.
The Agena was a 12, 000 lbf bi-propellant rocket that is considered to this day to be one of the most reliable rockets ever built.
Van Allen was the first to devise a balloon-rocket combination that lifted rockets on balloons high above most of Earth ’ s atmosphere before firing them even higher.
In rockets, the most common combinations are bipropellants, which use two chemicals, a fuel and an oxidiser.
Project HARP, short for High Altitude Research Project, was a joint project of the United States Department of Defense and Canada's Department of National Defence created with the goal of studying ballistics of re-entry vehicles at low cost ; whereas most such projects used expensive ( and failure-prone ) rockets, HARP used a non-rocket spacelaunch method based on a very large gun to fire the models to high altitudes and speeds.
The location was among the best in the continental United States for this purpose as it allowed for launches out over the Atlantic Ocean, and it was closer to the equator than most other parts of the United States, allowing rockets to get a boost from the Earth's rotationA Bumper ( rocket ) | Bumper V-2 was the first missile launched at Cape Canaveral, on July 24, 1950.
US rockets tend to be built of the most modern, lightest materials available and to extremely tight tolerances, using often purpose-built custom parts, resulting in great expense.
This is the most common method of transport to the pad and was used for all large Soviet rockets, even Buran.
In most Chinese versions of Wan Hu's story, he is described as an unfortunate pioneer of space travel who was burnt to death because of the explosion caused by the rockets, instead of becoming the first astronaut in history.
Relativistic rockets are usually seen discussed in the context of interstellar travel, since most would require a great deal of space to accelerate up to those velocities.

most and intentionally
Although most maps are fairly linear, there are some maps that were intentionally designed to avoid that, which have multiple exits.
The color red is intentionally absent from most of the film, but is used prominently in a few isolated shots for " anything in the real world that has been tainted by the other world " and " to connote really explosively emotional moments and situations ".
The project's intentionally oblique CIA cryptonym is made up of the digraph MK, meaning that the project was sponsored by the agency's Technical Services Staff, followed by the word Ultra ( which had previously been used to designate the most secret classification of World War II intelligence ).
However, unlike ' Erbert, most mischief is done intentionally.
As an example, John Bishop described the book's legacy as that of " the single most intentionally crafted literary artifact that our culture has produced [...] and, certainly, one of the great monuments of twentieth-century experimental letters.
The typography of the physical document pictured here, and still distributed today, was typeset by Ottawa's David Berman intentionally in Carl Dair's Cartier typeface: at the time the most prominent Canadian typeface, having been commissioned by the Governor-General as a celebration of Canada's centenary in 1967.
It is possible that Tyrtaeus intentionally alludes to Homer in instances such as these for political reasons: given the fact that his poetry, like that of other archaic authors, was most likely performed in the context of aristocratic symposia, his references to epic heroism served to praise the elite status of his aristocratic audience.
Counterexamples of cards which intentionally ignore ISO standards include hotel key cards, most subway and bus cards, and some national prepaid calling cards ( such as for the country of Cyprus ) in which the balance is stored and maintained directly on the stripe and not retrieved from a remote database.
The thieves attempted to steal the most easily transportable objects, which had been intentionally stored in the most remote location possible.
Such games generally have rulesets that normally encourage players to win ; for example, most variations of draughts ( known as " checkers " in the United States ) require players to make a capture move if it is available ; thus, in the misère variation, players can force their opponents to take a large number of checkers through intentionally " poor " play.
Second, the accidents occurred as the result of the officers intentionally parking their vehicles close to active traffic to shield a stopped motorist-something most civilians would never do.
For the most part, West's characters are intentionally shallow and stereotyped, and "… derive from all the B-grade genre films of the period …" ( Simon, 523 ) West's characters are Hollywood stereotypes, what Light calls " grotesques ".
She was known for hobnobbing with the biggest names in the industry, for getting a " scoop " before almost anyone else most of the time, and for being vicious in dealing with those who displeased her, whether intentionally or not.
The cannon was most likely intentionally buried, although this cannot be substantiated, it is certain that a natural earth formation did not aid in its concealment.
Social research began most intentionally, however, with the positivist philosophy of science in the early 19th century.
He therefore proposed that the work practice that had been developed in most work environments was crafted, intentionally or unintentionally, to be very inefficient in its execution.
In most conventional applications, when weight is transferred though intentionally compliant elements such as springs, dampers and anti-roll bars, the weight transfer is said to be " elastic ", while the weight which is transferred through more rigid suspension links such as A-arms and toe links is said to be " geometric ".
Probably the most famous single image from the film is the intentionally overexposed close-up of Hepburn's face in which only her facial features — her eyes, eyebrows, nose and mouth — are visible.
The most memorable location in the game is probably an intentionally frustrating garden maze.
Occasionally her arrangements intentionally mimic works by other performers, most noticeably on " Rainy Day Parade " from 2000's Pink Pearl, which quotes TV's The Mary Tyler Moore Show theme to lend ironic triumphalism to a song about a woman going back on anti-depressant medication, and " Cinnamon Park " from the 2004 album Underdog Victorious, which paraphrases portions of the 1972 single " Saturday in the Park " by the band Chicago.
Flag desecration ( or flag abuse ) is a term applied to various acts that intentionally destroy, damage or mutilate a flag in public, most often a national flag.
As such, most laws find assaulting a police dog to be equal or very similar to assaulting a human officer, and as a result some agencies will deem it acceptable for officers to open fire on a person who is intentionally hurting a police dog, with apparent attempt to kill it.
In 2006, " at least 669 Afghan civilians were killed in at least 350 armed attacks, most of which appear to have been intentionally launched at civilians or civilian objects.

0.253 seconds.