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bonnet and ",
Citroën 2CV with front " Suicide Doors ", post-1960 bonnet, and oversized factory protective bumpers in Buenos Aires, Argentina
An interesting use of mixed British and American vocabulary is with automobiles, where the American term " trunk " is almost universally used instead of the British term " boot ", the British word " sleeping policeman " is used instead of the American word " speed bump ”, while the engine covering is always referred to by the British term " bonnet ".
Columbia ( name ) | Columbia wearing a warship bearing the words " World Power " as her " Easter bonnet ", cover of Puck ( April 6, 1901 ).
This was specified as a " carriage dress ", with the understanding that when taking the air in an open carriage, the bonnet provided some privacy — such a bonnet was in fact an invisible in Paris ( caricature below )— and prevent wind-chapping, with its connotations of countrified rude health.
The style can be traced back to the 14th century in Northern England namely Grimsby and parts of Southern Italy, when it was more likely to be called a " bonnet ", which term was replaced, except in Scotland, by " cap " before about 1700.
Interestingly, the Sunbeam was simply rebadged in the strictest sense of the word, with the Chrysler badge on the bonnet replaced by one that read " Talbot ", but retaining its grille with a prominent Chrysler pentastar until 1981.
Sometimes a mammy considered herself to be " dressed up ", but that was usually just an addition of a bonnet and a silk velvet mantle, which probably belonged to her mistress.
Simple American bonnet or " mob cap ", in a portrait by Benjamin Greenleaf, 1805
The self-consciously quaint " bonnet ", which had been tongue-in-cheek euphemism for a hat for more than a generation, supplied Berlin with his rhyme.
The common corporate " face ", showing the curved lower edge of the grille and the crease running up the Hood ( vehicle ) | bonnet, are both visible.
Visually, the former scoop on the bonnet gave way to a closed " power bulge ", while a spoiler was integrated into the tail.
Columbia wearing a warship bearing the words " World Power " as her " Easter bonnet " ( cover of " Puck ( magazine ) | Puck ", April 6, 1901 ). The name Columbia for " America " ( in the sense of " European colonies in the New World ") first appeared in 1738 in the weekly publication of the debates of the British Parliament in Edward Cave's The Gentleman's Magazine.

bonnet and word
On the cover of Puck ( magazine ) | Puck published on April 6, 1901, in the wake of gainful victory in the Spanish – American War, Columbia ( name ) | Columbia – the National personification of the U. S. – preens herself with an Easter bonnet in the form of a warship bearing the words " World Power " and the word " Expansion " on the smoke coming out of its stack.
The word " bonnet " for male headgear was generally replaced in English by cap before 1700, except in Scotland, where it remains in use, now especially for military headgear, like the Feather bonnet ( not to be confused with those worn by Native Americans, for which " bonnet " was also used ), Glengarry, Kilmarnock and Balmoral.
Externally it is very easy to differentiate between Mk1 and Mk2 versions ; the Mk1 has the words THAMESTRADER in red on a chrome strip along the bottom of the bonnet opening and the white painted grill between the headlights has a vertical divider with a red circular badge with 4 stars, whereas the Mk2 has just the word THAMES under the bonnet, and TRADER in white letters spaced out between the headlights replacing the divider and badge.

bonnet and for
But whenever a major purchase was contemplated forty years ago -- a new bedroom set or a winter coat, an Easter bonnet, a bicycle for Junior -- the family set off for the downtown department store, where the selection would be greatest.
* Balmoral bonnet, an unbrimmed cap common in Highland dress, named for the Scottish village and castle
“ An ‘ aypenny a lot ing-uns .” “ Twopence a pound grapes .” “ Three a penny Yarmouth bloaters .” “ Who ‘ ll buy a bonnet for fourpence ?” “ Pick ‘ em out cheap here!
The bonnet is the part of the encasing through which the stem ( see below ) passes and that forms a guide and seal for the stem.
To access internal parts of a valve, a user would take off the bonnet, usually for maintenance.
; 1861: Death of Prince Albert ; Queen Victoria refuses to go out in public for many years, and when she did she wore a widow's bonnet instead of the crown.
In addition to healing, medicine served many other purposes, for example among the Cheyenne, one of Plains Indians that lived in the Great Plains of North America, medicine such as war paint, war shields, war shirts, and war bonnets, such as the famous war bonnet of Roman Nose, served to protect a warrior from wounding during battle.
* Find some aluminium sheet metal at the scrapper ( for instance from the side of a van ) to use for the bonnet
Steel used for the bodywork was at its best quality, and the Wolfsburg emblem at the tip of the front of the bonnet was a complex fabrication ( subsequent models deleted the emblem ).
A spare tyre is located in the engine bay under the bonnet, and as with all Ladas, a 21 piece toolkit is also supplied for do-it-yourself roadside repairs.
Diced pequin pepper and / or scotch bonnet pepper is often added for spice.
In particular the corrugated Citroën H Van style " ripple bonnet " of convex swages was replaced ( except for the Sahara ), with one using six larger concave swages and looked similar until the end of production.
The collection includes The Whisper, a figurine commissioned by John Walter Edward Douglas-Scott-Montagu to his friend Charles Robinson Sykes who sculpted a personal mascot for the bonnet of his Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost.
The layout makes good use of the cylinder inclination to lower the overall height of the engine, which allowed for more aerodynamic designs of cars to be achieved by lowering the bonnet line.
Some special noted features for all Infini series are: infini logo on the back, upgraded suspension, upgraded ECU, higher horsepower, lightened weight, 15-inch BBS aluminum alloy wheels, Infini logo steering wheel, aero bumper kits, bronze colored window glass, floor bar on the passenger side, aluminum bonnet with scoop, flare and holder.
In the United States, the AWWA and NFPA recommend hydrants be colored chrome yellow for rapid identification apart from the bonnet and nozzle caps which should be coded according to their available flow.
External changes included: new grilles in the front bumper to improve the air intake for engine compartment cooling ; a redesigned bonnet ( hood ) with new lateral air slats to further assist underbonnet ventilation ; an adjustable roof spoiler above the tailgate to assist in competition and to emphasise the cars sporty lines ; new five-bolt ( stud ) wheels derived from the rally cars ( stronger than the previous design ); and finally, the rear of the car was changed with only one exhaust pipe now showing.
The hood / bonnet of the 99 ( and also the 900 ) caused problems for the police livery team.
for the bonnet of Bonny Dundee.
Here standardisation was taken a step further with the bodies on 9 hp four-cylinder and 15 hp six-cylinder being almost indistinguishable except for bonnet length.
Ives was unhappy with concert audiences who unadventurously resisted difficult modern music — as is shown by other words in his parody: " Nice sweety silk bonnet melodies ... nice pretty perfumed sounds for the dress circle cushion chai ears.
The crown was remodelled in 1540 for James V when the velvet and ermine bonnet were added to bring it to its present form.

bonnet and headgear
* War bonnet, feathered headgear worn as military decoration by Plains Indians
One of the flat hats worn in academia is known as a bonnet or Tudor bonnet and derives directly from medieval headgear of the period of the original 1571 Bill.
In 1734 the headgear worn by the corps was a flat bonnet, ornamented with green and white feathers.

bonnet and ),
In other instances, it either shares a term with American English, as with truck ( UK: lorry ) or eggplant ( UK: aubergine ), or sometimes with British English, as with mobile phone ( US: cell phone ) or bonnet ( US: hood ).
Full size vans often have a very short hood ( bonnet ), with the engine block moved to within the passenger cabin.
* detachable doors, bonnet ( and boot lid after 1960 ), by " slide out " P profile sheet metal hinges
Emma Hill by Ford Madox Brown ( 1853 ), a woman wearing a later version of the poke bonnet.
* Tam o ' shanter ( hat ), distinctive Scottish bonnet
* Hood ( vehicle ), known as a ' bonnet ' in British English, the hinged engine cover of a motor vehicle
* Scotch bonnet ( pepper ), a variety of chilli pepper
This is most often accomplished by the character donning a diaper ( and sometimes a gown and bonnet ), writing a note ( usually simply saying " Please take care of my baby!
* Tam o ' Shanter ( cap ), a Scottish bonnet, worn in place of a beret by certain military units
From then on, the car was a 1976 – 1980 model ( registration SLW 287R ), Austin Citron Green in colour with a satin black bonnet.
In contrast to the ' classic ' Saab 900 with its longitudinally mounted engine and front-hinged hood ( bonnet ), the NG900 had a more-common transversely mounted engine with rear-hinged hood ( bonnet ).
* Hood ( vehicle ), covering over the engine compartment in a motor vehicle ( aka ' bonnet ' in English-speaking countries )
Class AA hydrants (> 1500 gpm ) should have their nozzle caps and bonnet colored light blue, Class A hydrants ( 1000 – 1499 gpm ), green, Class B hydrants ( 500 – 999 gpm ), orange, and Class C hydrants ( 0 – 499 gpm ), red.
In The Fable of the Bees ( 1714 ), he laments that the " bees of social virtue are buzzing in Man's bonnet ": that civilized man has stigmatized his private appetites and the result is the retardation of the common good.
Ford attempted to address the AUs issues in its Series II ( April 2000 ) and Series III ( November 2001 ) updates, which brought minor styling changes such as a raised bonnet across the range ( excluding XR6 and XR8 models ), and the scrapping of the unpopular " waterfall " grill on the base model Forte.
Aside from the doors, bonnet ( hood ), and boot ( trunk ), the body was moulded as a single unit of fibreglass.
The best known is the edible Scotch bonnet ( Marasmius oreades ), commonly known as the fairy ring champignon.
The traditional bonnet of the Kilwinning Archers of Scotland There are several Scottish variants of the beret, notably the Scottish bonnet or Bluebonnet ( originally bonaid in Gaelic ), whose ribbon cockade and feathers identify the wearer ’ s clan and rank ), and which is a symbol of Scottish patriotism.

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