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scaffold and was
The fixed wooden scaffold was removed, and, so as to reach all the frieze, one of pipe, on wheels, built up from the floor.
As she was led to the scaffold, Madame Roland shouted " O liberty!
However, other evidence was interpreted as suggesting that DNA was structurally uninteresting and possibly just a molecular scaffold for the apparently more interesting protein molecules.
Eiffel had calculated that this would be satisfactory until they approached halfway to the first level: accordingly work was stopped for the purpose of erecting a wooden supporting scaffold.
Immediately before his execution on 31 January, Fawkes jumped from the scaffold where he was to be hanged and broke his neck, thus avoiding the agony of the mutilation that followed.
But when it became known that she was neither a virgin at the wedding, nor a faithful wife afterwards, she ended up on the scaffold and the marriage declared invalid.
When Brown was hanged without incident, Booth stood in uniform near the scaffold and afterwards expressed great satisfaction with Brown's fate, although he admired the condemned man's bravery in facing death stoically.
There, he was placed upon a scaffold and tortured for fifty minutes by members of the girl's family, who thrust hot iron brands into his flesh, starting with his feet and legs and working upward to his head.
More was executed on a scaffold erected on Tower Hill, London, just outside the Tower of London.
In his final moments, as he was being led up the scaffold, the hangman asked for his forgiveness.
When the star was due to rise, the girl was placed and tied on the scaffold.
His body was treated with particular rancour, apparently on Henry's orders, being stripped and left on the scaffold until the evening, when it was taken on pikes and thrown naked into a rough grave in the churchyard of All Hallows ' Barking, also known as All Hallows-by-the-Tower.
To be able to reach the ceiling, Michelangelo needed a support ; the first idea was by Julius ' favoured architect Donato Bramante, who wanted to build for him a scaffold to be suspended in the air with ropes.
The matter was taken before the Pope, who ordered Michelangelo to build a scaffold of his own.
The procession was timed so that she would be left alone on the scaffold at the moment the morning star rose.
For the central tower they designed an inner rotating scaffold, surrounded by timber centring to support the masonry vault of the Central Lobby, that spans 57 feet 2 inches, and an external timber tower, a portable steam engine was used to lift stone and brick to the upper parts of the tower.
Charles I was executed on 30 January 1649 on a scaffold erected outside the building, stepping onto it from a first-floor window.
Charles was then escorted through the Banqueting House in the Palace of Whitehall to a scaffold.
Colonel Francis Hacker who signed the order to the executioner of the king and commanded the guard around the scaffold and at the trial was hanged.
Paris was in the grip of the Reign of Terror, hanging over him was the spectre of suspicion, Custine himself was under arrest for failing in the field and would shortly die on the scaffold.

scaffold and length
For a general purpose scaffold the maximum bay length is 2. 1 m, for heavier work the bay size is reduced to 2 or even 1. 8 m while for inspection a bay width of up to 2. 7 m is allowed.
As dean of Peterborough, Richard Fletcher, at the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots, at Fotheringay " knelt down on the scaffold steps and started to pray out loud and at length, in a prolonged and rhetorical style as though determined to force his way into the pages of history ".
The variable loop length is typically composed of ten to twenty amino acids, and the scaffold may be any protein which has good solubility and compacity properties.

scaffold and space
Bone generally has the ability to regenerate completely but requires a very small fracture space or some sort of scaffold to do so.

scaffold and be
Extraordinary precautions were taken so that no stranger be allowed in the city and no citizen within the enclosure surrounding the scaffold.
The structure of the condensed chromosome is thought to be loops of 30 nm fibre to a central scaffold of proteins.
The rest, which can be considered a scaffold proteins remain stable, as cylindrical ring complexes within the nuclear envelope.
A biodegradable scaffold would be used to offer support for the regenerating foreskin.
According to a widely-told story, King Charles I quoted lines from the book as he mounted the scaffold to be executed ; Samuel Richardson named the heroine of his first novel after Sidney's Pamela.
Until the release of the revised TG20 the HSE continue to allow scaffold to be built in accordance with BS 5973.
With one basic 24 pound unit a scaffold of various sizes and heights could be assembled easily by a couple of labourers without the nuts or bolts previously needed.
The scaffolding width is determined by the width of the boards, the minimum width allowed is 600 mm but a more typical four-board scaffold would be 870 mm wide from standard to standard.
For heavier duty scaffold much more substantial baulks set in concrete can be required.
When a complete box tie is impossible a l-shaped lip tie can be used to hook the scaffold to the structure, to limit inward movement an additional transom, a butt transom, is place hard against the outside face of the structure.
A putlog scaffold may also be called a bricklayer's scaffold.
' Have you asked for a scaffold to be raised for him?
He was condemned first to be broken on the wheel and then beheaded ; but, reprieved on the scaffold, his sentence was commuted to lifelong banishment, with his whole family, to Berezov in Siberia, where he died six years later, in 1747.
The deeply religious Dutch frontiersmen believed the collapsing scaffold to be an act of God.
In the case of broad-based aneurysms, a stent may be passed first into the parent artery to serve as a scaffold for the coils (" stent-assisted coiling "), although the long-term studies of patients with intracranial stents have not yet been done.
The encapsulation of the biological component in biosensors, presents with a slightly different problem that ordinary sensors, this can either be done by means of a semipermeable barrier, such as a dialysis membrane or a hydrogel, a 3D polymer matrix, which either physically constrains the sensing macromolecule or chemically ( macromolecule is bound to the scaffold ).
That may or may not be true, but from the contents of his scaffold speech, it was certainly something George believed.
The construction of a scaffold occurs at a time where the child may not be able to articulate or explore learning independently.

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