In June 2002, Hasek backstopped the Red Wings to hockey's version of the Holy Grail. |
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After the reggae anthem Redemption Song and Broken Wings, nobody was left sitting down. |
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Today, his company, the Wings of Autumn, has a reputation of being the finest animal stuffers in town. |
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The glider is a Wings Albatross with a sail area of over 200 square feet and no battens. |
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Wings spread, it appears poised for flight, ready to soar over Lake Michigan, an opalescent blue in early summer. |
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Wings fluttered and talons gripped, as he settled himself upon the strong hand. |
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Hasek moved to the Motor City in 2001 and by June 2002 had backstopped the Red Wings to the Stanley Cup. |
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The mystery of the afterlife, the questions that surround the very idea of omnipotence are vivid and real within the scope of Wings of Desire. |
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In their lone game of the week, St Adolphe blanked the Grunthal Red Wings 5-behind the shutout goaltending of Eric Peloquin. |
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I had the ability to clip my clicker blade with the top vane much easier than with regular Spin Wings. |
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A delightful surprise is Waiting in the Wings, Coward's fiftieth play, an undeserved flop in 1960 and a greatly deserving revival now. |
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If you take away power-play goals and empty-netters from the series, the Bruins only outscored the Red Wings 6-4 in the five games. |
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I'm not a Wings fan really, but I quite like the pulsating insistency and the layered backing vocals. |
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The hilt was of the strongest metal, and was forged in the manner of Dragon Wings, flaring towards the point of the Sword. |
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Wings on the hull sides create stability and lift to prevent the boat from flipping over. |
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The Red Wings are the easy Stanley Cup pick for anyone who puts stock in the return of the Dominator behind a great defense. |
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And when you see beer, chili, and Buffalo Wings, you know you're probably at a sporting event in the States. |
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Ancient Wings allows users to see how the ventral hindwing of 54 butterflies in the genus Bicyclus have changed over time. |
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Mamool, a five-year-old son of In the Wings, raced in the Melbourne Cup last year but fractured his right hind fetlock and was eased. |
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More filling are the Buffalo Chicken Wings with hot garlic sauce and Nakamura's Half Moon, which has minced vegetables in seasoning. |
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Wings and quarterbacks must learn the cutter, feeder, and post position of the Shuffle. |
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Wings Of Desire, his poetic 1987 fable about guardian angels watching over Berlin, remains one of the most successful European productions in cinema history. |
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The Red Wings practiced in the Windsor Arena that August and September, and Jack Adams signed him to a galt contract. |
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Alvarez also claimed he played hockey for the Detroit Red Wings and married a starlet from Mexico. |
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Ted Lindsay, Reggie Sinclair, and Marty Pavelich of the Red Wings, were ushers, and Ted's wife, Pat, was matron of honor. |
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As part of a far-reaching partnership between Pepsi and Buffalo Wild Wings, the chain is rolling out Spire in its outlets. |
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Already, a detachment of Vanguards was on its way to intercept the Wings. |
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Through all of this, however, howe was, as he always is, the workhorse of the Red Wings. |
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Since 2014 Jackson has been the race director of the Wings for Life World Run. |
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And they had every opportunity to win despite giving the high-powered Red Wings six power plays. |
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Wings and canards channel the airflow in the most efficient way to get the least amount of drag from the car. |
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Canterbury Lace is a great-granddaughter of blue hen Sunbittern and so related to celebrities such as Dubawi, High-Rise and In The Wings. |
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With Private Wings, users can take to the air in Cessnas, Pipers, Katanas and more. |
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Independent Wings are a grouping of two or more squadrons, either flying squadrons or ground support squadrons. |
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Isn't she the same woman who works at Wings that you and Billy almost got arrested for helping her with her last little oops? |
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Wings were made thinner and swept back to reduce transonic drag, which required new manufacturing methods to obtain sufficient strength. |
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Tracks include Real Guitars Have Wings, Cosmic Jazz, Lady Whiskey, Phoenix and Jailbait. |
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Designed to replicate restaurant favourites like Sticky Peking BBQ Ribs, Sticky Teriyaki Chicken Wings, Sticky Char Siu Pork Ribs. |
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The city features prominently in Henry James' The Aspern Papers and The Wings of the Dove. |
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Amini screenwrote Jude and The Wings of the Dove and now directs his first feature. |
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As the first time she became actively involved in the songwriting process of one of her albums, Wings marked a shift in Tyler's career, focusing on mainstream pop music. |
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Fitzgerald, the main songwriter on Tyler's 2005 album Wings. |
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Finally, I stopped lunging and with my Baby Belly, my Bat Wings, my Muffin Top and my Banana Folds, I rolled up my yoga mat and walked to the door. |
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But I was tipped over the edge when he decided to join in with the piped background music and give a romantic, tear-jerking rendition of Westlife's Flying Without Wings. |
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However, the delay in forming up Big Wings meant the formations often did not arrive at all or until after German bombers had hit 11 Group's airfields. |
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The Wings Ab Initio Flight Training product is a comprehensive curriculum developed with Swissair and the British Aerospace Flying College at Prestwick, Scotland. |
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Our evening kick-starts with a chilled Argentinean white wine and a platter-full of Chicken Skewers, a Burger Slider, Atomic Drumstick, Lamb Kibbeh and Chicken Wings. |
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The Eat-a-Bug Cookbook recommends stripping off the antennae, limbs, and wings before baking them in the oven until crisp. |
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The Dar al Athar al Islamiyyah cultural centres include education wings, conservation labs, and research libraries. |
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For waiting aircraft, equipment is used to spray special deicing fluids on the wings. |
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One of the two Jagdgeschwader fighter wings, JG 2, lost 14 Fw 190s and eight pilots killed. |
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He then attended the Central Flying School, where he was awarded his wings. |
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They take off from water by facing into the wind and strongly beating their wings. |
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Just as it is going to hit the water a bird will fold its wings against its body. |
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The male will then shake their heads in a similar way to when they are guarding their nest but with their wings closed. |
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Immature eagles of this species typically have white on the tail and often have white markings on the wings. |
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While soaring the wings and tail are held in one plane with the primary tips often spread. |
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This identification may rely on the golden's relatively long tail and patterns of white or gray on the wings and tail. |
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The breeding male has greyish upper parts with white wings and under parts. |
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Western capercaillies are not elegant fliers due to their body weight and short, rounded wings. |
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It is an elegant bird, soaring on long wings held at a dihedral, and long forked tail, twisting as it changes direction. |
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By wrapping their wings around themselves, they can trap a layer of still air around themselves. |
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There are daily flights of the Airbus Beluga transport aircraft of Airbus wings from Broughton for the smaller aircraft. |
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Their short wings are adapted for swimming with a flying technique under water. |
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The incubating parent holds the egg against its brood patch with its wings. |
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They have a white head and body, grey back, grey wings tipped solid black and a yellow bill. |
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After fishing, cormorants go ashore, and are frequently seen holding their wings out in the sun. |
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Razorbills dive deep into the sea using their wings and their streamlined bodies to propel themselves toward their prey. |
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Light European males can be distinguished from kestrels by their mainly brown wings. |
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If ice forms on the wings or control surfaces, this may adversely affect the flying qualities of the aircraft. |
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The new wind direction will lead to the development of a new wing and the over development of one of the original wings. |
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Longer wings and low wing loading are typical of more pelagic species, while diving species have shorter wings. |
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Icarus and Daedalus were captives of King Minos and crafted wings to escape. |
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Flying loons resemble plump geese with seagulls' wings that are relatively small in proportion to the bulky body. |
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In winter plumage is dark grey above, with some indistinct lighter mottling on the wings, and a white chin, throat and underside. |
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Indeed, most species must run upwind across the water's surface with wings flapping to generate sufficient lift to take flight. |
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Gulls are typically medium to large birds, usually grey or white, often with black markings on the head or wings. |
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They are generally uniform in shape, with heavy bodies, long wings, and moderately long necks. |
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Due to their short wings, auks have to flap their wings very quickly in order to fly. |
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They are slender, lightly built birds with long, forked tails, narrow wings, long bills, and relatively short legs. |
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White was the preferred colour, and sometimes wings or entire birds were used. |
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Holding their wings only loosely against their bodies, pelicans float with relatively little of their bodies below the water surface. |
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A fibrous layer deep in the breast muscles can hold the wings rigidly horizontal for gliding and soaring. |
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Agonistic behaviour consists of thrusting and snapping at opponents with their bills, or lifting and waving their wings in a threatening manner. |
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In all cases, doors essentially act as wings, using a hydrodynamic shape to provide horizontal spread. |
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As with all wings, the towing vessel must go at a certain speed for the doors to remain standing and functional. |
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Instead of flapping its wings continuously while flying, Onychonycteris likely alternated between flaps and glides while in the air. |
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The ankle joint can flex so as to allow the trailing edge of the wings to bend downwards. |
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By folding the wings in toward their bodies on the upstroke, they save 35 percent energy during flight. |
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The sharp leading edges of the wings can create vortexes which provide lift. |
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Body heat is mainly lost through the wings as they are filled with blood vessels, but they may be used as an insulator while resting. |
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Bats also possess a system of sphincter valves on the arterial side of the vascular network that runs along the edge of their wings. |
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The disease is named after a white fungus, Pseudogymnoascus destructans, found growing on the muzzles, ears, and wings of afflicted bats. |
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They are variable in size but generally plump, with broad and relatively short wings. |
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The albatrosses are among the largest flying birds, with long, narrow wings for gliding. |
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They have a slender streamlined body, long pointed wings and a short bill with a wide gape. |
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When a bird arrives at the nest, a greeting ceremony occurs in which each partner raises and lowers its wings and plumes. |
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The wings are opened under water and the open eyes are protected by the transparent third eyelid. |
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At that moment a flight of birds passed close overhead, and at the whirr of their wings a panic fear seized her. |
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Although it is a relatively strong flier, it also glides frequently, holding its wings in a very pronounced V shape as it does. |
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True finches have a bouncing flight like most small passerines, alternating bouts of flapping with gliding on closed wings. |
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The fruit is a small samara, although the wings may be obscure in some species. |
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The bee was carrying pollen of a previously unknown orchid taxon, Meliorchis caribea, on its wings. |
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This maneuver allows the bird to cover almost a thousand kilometres a day without flapping its wings. |
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The wings are stiff and cambered, with thickened streamlined leading edges. |
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Bird skins are prepared by retaining the key bones of the wings, leg and skull along with the skin and feathers. |
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Hang gliders most often have flexible wings given shape by a frame, though some have rigid wings. |
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To minimise drag, these types have a streamlined fuselage and long narrow wings having a high aspect ratio. |
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A kite is an aircraft tethered to a fixed point so that the wind blows over its wings. |
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When the aircraft travels forwards, air flows over the wings which are shaped to create lift. |
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So until the 1930s most wings were too light weight to have enough strength and external bracing struts and wires were added. |
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Wingtip pontoons were attached directly below the lower wings near their tips. |
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It is named for the naturalist who discovered it and the checkerboard pattern on its wings. |
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The new Boeing 787 structure including the wings and fuselage is composed largely of composites. |
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An adultoid is a mature alate that remains in the colony, sheds its wings and becomes a functional reproductive. |
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A silver portal opens in the sky and a ebony alicorn stallion gallops from it the silver tips on his black wings shine in the sun's light. |
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Wing length and wing area were calculated for each of the four wings on each individual. |
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Its light glimmered on the river and on the wings of carrion fowl awheel overhead. |
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His sketches show the details of batlike wings which were to spread out on the downward stroke and fold up with the upward stroke. |
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Finally he began to hover in the open window of the shack, buzzing there with his furious wings, looking at me beadily, then, flash, he was gone. |
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My little brother Trevor was so giddy he finally got his blood wings today! |
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Dude, I got blood wings going down on Veronica yesterday, I had to wipe off the blood with an SOS pad I was so disgusted. |
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They had to move the plane back from the runway to de-ice the wings before takeoff. |
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And having an entire group of people constantly waiting in the wings to downtrod even the slightest POSITIVE moves does not help matters. |
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Also, duns are dull and generally sober colored, whilst spinners are more brightly colored and shining and their wings are clear and transparent. |
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Birds initially developed wings and feathers as a means of heat regulation. The use of wings for flight is an example of exaptation. |
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With her pocket knife, she starts to prise the spikes from his wings. Fergawdsake, she says. Somebody shut Tracker up. |
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Cornish peppered mackerel, smoked haddock, Scottish herring and pearl-white skate wings are all laid on a bed of crushed ice at the fishmonger. |
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The upper wings of the moth which Jacob held were undoubtedly marked with kidney-shaped spots of fulvous hue. |
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It was a bird, a small hawkling. A baby. And as she watched, it began to stretch its wet, feeble wings. |
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The pot had previously simmered skate wings, cods' heads, whales, pigs' hearts and a long litany of other horribles. |
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Wider machines may have the wings supported by individual wheels and have hinge joints to allow flexing of the machine over uneven ground. |
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Suetonius placed his legionaries in close order, with lightly armed auxiliaries on the flanks and cavalry on the wings. |
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His body is a spider with wings of a butterfly, and his head is a multicorn. |
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John Singer Sargent's painting of Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth, in a gown decorated with green beetle wings. |
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Individual groups clumped together, forming a single large mass flanked by horsemen on the wings. |
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When she was musing she was a kestrel, which hangs in the air by an invisible motion of its wings. |
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His Shadow Cabinet appointments included MPs associated with the various wings of the party. |
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Filton is the main research and development and support centre for all Airbus wings, fuel systems and landing gear integration. |
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This, in turn, means that it does not need as much lift or thrust, which permits smaller engines, and allows conventional wings to be used. |
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Though ye haue lien among the pots, yet shall yee bee as the wings of a doue, couered with siluer, and her feathers with yellow gold. |
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There have been many attempts to understand the principles of high air pressure below hulls and wings. |
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Instead they were transported by road, minus the wings that would be attached at Elmdon. |
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Other contemporary denominations that contain high church wings include some Lutheran, Presbyterian, and Methodist churches. |
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Blackpool International Airport has services to Belfast via Isle of Man by city wings. |
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A huge open gallery ran along the main axis, with wings extending down either side. |
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This residence, built of brick covered with Norwegian marble, was composed of geometric blocks, wings and a tower. |
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Originally a medieval manor house, having a main block with forward projecting wings, it burned down in 1716 and was rebuilt by John Aislabie. |
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The anterior pronotal angles are produced forward, the metaventrite is very short and the hind wings are absent. |
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The season saw the introduction of wings as seen previously on various cars, including the Chaparral sports car. |
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Colin Chapman introduced modest front wings and a spoiler on Hill's Lotus 49B at Monaco. |
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In the same manner that an aircraft requires stabilizers, such as a tailplane with elevators as well as wings, a boat requires a keel and rudder. |
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In former times, numbered flying wings have existed, but recently they have been created only when required. |
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Many a scholar, making wings of candlewicks to flap away old darkness, monked his life to fasting long while feasting upon new light. |
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The wings are manufactured at Broughton in North Wales, then transported by barge to Mostyn docks for ship transport. |
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Runway lighting and signage may need changes to provide clearance to the wings and avoid blast damage from the engines. |
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The A350 features new composite wings with a wingspan that is common to the proposed variants. |
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Airbus UK is a wholly owned subsidiary of Airbus SAS which produces wings for the Airbus aircraft family. |
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In 1898, Bell experimented with tetrahedral box kites and wings constructed of multiple compound tetrahedral kites covered in maroon silk. |
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Two wings of the Boiler House are used to stage the major temporary exhibitions for which an entry fee is charged. |
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Creatures were designed to be biologically believable, such as the enormous wings of the fell beast to help it fly. |
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Prison Governor Captain George Hall employed boys to make bricks to build the C and M block wings onto the building. |
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Not that angels have wings, but that you may know that they leave the heights and the most elevated dwelling to approach human nature. |
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Accordingly, the wings attributed to these powers have no other meaning than to indicate the sublimity of their nature. |
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Phylloxerans are similar to aphids but are without cornicles and hold their wings horizontally at rest. |
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The wings also function as stabilizers to give better maneuverability when running. |
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Tests have shown that the wings are actively involved in rapid braking, turning and zigzag maneuvers. |
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He will then violently flap his wings to symbolically clear out a nest in the soil. |
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Then, while the hen runs a circle around him with lowered wings, he will wind his head in a spiral motion. |
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These feather heavy areas such as the body, thighs and wings do not usually vary much from ambient temperatures due to this behavioural controls. |
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After this had been stated by the idol, Ayar Oche turned into a stone, just as he was, with his wings. |
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At Duncombe Park, Yorkshire, Barry designed new wings, which were added between in 1843 and 1846 in the English Baroque style of the main block. |
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They were commonly built with one or two wings to form an 'L' or 'U' shape. |
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Lengths were constructed the same way as the border light, only these lights were mounted vertically in the rear where the wings were. |
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The upper wings have pale primary patches, and the primary flight feathers are also paler when viewed from below. |
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Their wings are relatively short but strongly muscled, enabling them to be used as flippers underwater. |
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Once prey is spotted, it begins its stoop, folding back the tail and wings, with feet tucked. |
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Then, when they are old enough, the rearing box is opened, allowing the bird to train its wings. |
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The thoracic vertebrae are partially fused, providing a solid brace for the wings during flight. |
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The design is based on butterfly wings, and the project also included a new link to the Five Weirs Walk and the installation of footway lighting. |
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The wing or rift saw, it may be said, is of special design having six wings with portions of the saw plate cut away between the wings. |
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The wings make a whirring sound when the bird is disturbed from a resting place. |
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The European golden plover is quite thickset, with its wings only being slightly longer than its tail. |
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The male swoops down over the nest flapping its wings in a courtship display. |
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Into her darkness, a churning synaesthesia, where her pain was the taste of old iron, scent of melon, wings of a moth brushing her cheek. |
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A peacock butterfly now spread himself upon the teasle, fresh and newly emerged, as the blue and chocolate down on his wings testified. |
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Hastily the tensome make their way to the stage unloading their props in the wings. |
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Most of the gathering was milling around them, talking over plates of pizza puffs, zucchini fingers, and teriyakied chicken wings. |
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Unisi are unicorns with pegasi wings, the result of crossbreeding between the two species. A single such creature is called a unisus. |
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At one point they clearly ad-libbed when a rat allegedly ran across one of the wings. |
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And his discreete father, being safe according to his vowe, hanging vp his wings in the temple of Appollo. |
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O welcome, pure-ey'd Faith, white-handed Hope, Thou hovering angel, girt with golden wings! |
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Angels are often portrayed with wings, an artistic licence, to give understanding of flight, our early science suggests. |
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Like the eyes of moths, legs of water striders, and leaves of the lotus plant, the cicada wings have natural microstructures. |
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Steering and stabilization fins switchblading out, followed by the wings. |
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Tips of maribou feathers are used whole for the wings of streamer flies. |
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It also introduced spaces for shorter exhibitions in between the wings. |
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There came a hurtle of wings, a flash of bright feathers, and a great pigeon with slate-grey plumage and a neck bright as an opal, lit on a swaying finial. |
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If the wings aren't big enough, your paper airplane will fly like a rock. |
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The upper wings of the moth which Jacob held were undoubtedly marked with kidney-shaped spots of a fulvous hue. But there was no crescent upon the underwing. |
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Furthermore, the birds orientate themselves carefully with regard to the sun and gently flap their feathersome wings to increase convective cooling. |
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The wings of bats are much thinner and consist of more bones than that of birds, allowing bats to maneuver more accurately and fly with more lift and less drag. |
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The most diaphanous wings carry a burden of pollen from flower to flower. |
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And those white shapes enfolding her were surely never bridal veils, but vapoury wings that rose above her golden head, and swept down curving to her feet. |
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Duly married, the couple lived for some time in peace and contentment, until one day Marko boasted that his wife was a vila, whereupon she put on her wings and flew away. |
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Today we see air air hostesses who earned their wings after passing the Northeast Airlines air hostess course at Newcastle Airport Training Centre in February of which year? |
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Still fluffy with down, she often attacks the other birds, cacking and flashing her wings, or threatens me as I watch through the tiny peephole of the near box. |
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The gulls in the river were flying in long, lazy curves, dipping down to the water, skimming it an instant, and then wheeling up again with easy, slanting wings. |
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His flexible wings, wrapped round him, serve him as bed-clothes, and his mate carries the batling clinging to her breast even when she flies out to forage. |
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As a jet barrels down a runway, the air above its airfoiled wings moves faster than the air below, creating a difference in air pressure that pulls and pushes the plane up. |
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Back to thy punishment, False fugitive, and to thy speed add wings. |
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Because the animal is in motion, there is some airflow relative to its body which, combined with the velocity of the wings, generates a faster airflow moving over the wing. |
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The number and shape of the wings vary widely on different types. |
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When the available engine power increased during the 1920s and 1930s, wings could be made heavy and strong enough that bracing was not needed any more. |
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Whether flexible or rigid, most wings have a strong frame to give them their shape and to transfer lift from the wing surface to the rest of the aircraft. |
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As is the case with planes, there are a wide variety of glider types differing in the construction of their wings, aerodynamic efficiency, location of the pilot and controls. |
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The fruits of Norway maple are paired samaras with widely diverging wings, Norway maple seeds are flattened, while those of sugar maple are globose. |
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The wings are very strong and are generally short and pointed, and the flight of ducks requires fast continuous strokes, requiring in turn strong wing muscles. |
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It is mainly brown above and white below with long, angled wings. |
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They have feathered feet and nostrils and short, rounded wings. |
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Unlike birds whose stiff wings deliver bending and torsional stress to the shoulders, bats have a flexible wing membrane which can only resist tension. |
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The bats' most distinguishing feature is that their forelimbs are developed as wings, making them the only mammals in the world naturally capable of flight. |
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As the air flows between the wings and the water surface it is compressed to a higher density and exerts a stronger upward force against the bird above. |
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The wings are long and broad, suitably shaped for soaring and gliding flight, and have the unusually large number of 30 to 35 secondary flight feathers. |
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All morphs have certain similarities, such as only the dark morph has more than dark edges on the underneath, and they all have pale inner primaries on the top of the wings. |
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Crows on the roof beat their wings and made their low tubercular moan. |
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Their prototypes are the oldest winged fossils, dating back to the Devonian, and are different in several respects from the wings of other insects. |
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This is a typical harrier, which hunts on long wings held in a shallow V in its low flight during which the bird closely hugs the contours of the land below it. |
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The wings have a silvery appearance due to white feather edgings. |
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They have relatively short wings due to their need for economical movement underwater, and consequently have the highest flight costs of any bird. |
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For example, they use their wings to cover the naked skin of the upper legs and flanks to conserve heat, or leave these areas bare to release heat. |
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Amongst these are an advanced Toyota plant that manufactures engines, a TATA steelworks, Shotton Paper, and Airbus, making the wings for the A330 and the A380 at Broughton. |
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Males will demonstrate ownership of a nest by gesturing towards their neighbours with their head with the beak pointing down and the wings slightly outstretched. |
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They dive with their bodies straight and rigid, wings tucked close to the body but reaching back, extending beyond the tail, before piercing the water like an arrow. |
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Damaged or broken wings are a frequent cause of death in adults. |
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The wings of the northern gannet are long and narrow and are positioned towards the front of the body, allowing efficient use of air currents when flying. |
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Then Ayar Oche stood up, displayed a pair of large wings, and said he should be the one to stay at Guanacaure as an idol in order to speak with their father the Sun. |
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If we will disbelieve every thing, because we cannot know all things, we shall do muchwhat as wisely as he who would not use his legs because he had no wings to fly. |
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Maine state politicians, Democrats and Republicans alike, are noted for having more moderate views than many in the national wings of their respective parties. |
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It does not spin, but it has four hinged, motorized walls that open and close like giant butterfly wings, imparting a slight illusion of propellerlike rotation. |
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Except for a few experimental or military designs, all aircraft built to date have had all of their weight lifted off the ground by airflow across the wings. |
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It featured an aerodynamically clean design with four de Havilland Ghost turbojet engines buried in the wings, a pressurised fuselage, and large square windows. |
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Composites are used on fuselage, wings, tail, doors, and interior. |
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The 787 is the first major commercial airplane to have a composite fuselage, composite wings, and use composites in most other airframe components. |
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This led to the belief big wings were far more effective than they were. |
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The Latin term for falcon, falco, is related to falx, the Latin word meaning sickle, in reference to the silhouette of the falcon's long, pointed wings in flight. |
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Opponents pointed out the big wings would take too long to form up, and the strategy ran a greater risk of fighters being caught on the ground refuelling. |
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Some children's libraries have entire floors or wings dedicated to them in bigger libraries while smaller ones may have a separate room or area for children. |
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In these temple fronts with columns and a pediment are very common for the main entrance of grand buildings, but often flanked by large wings or set in courtyards. |
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The more usual plan extended wings of rooms all opening onto a linking portico, which might be extended at right angles, even to enclose a courtyard. |
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The bones within bat wings, for example, are very similar to those in mice feet and primate hands, due to the descent of all these structures from a common mammalian ancestor. |
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In contrast, the SABRE engine permits a much slower, shallower climb, breathing air and using its wings to support the vehicle therefore increasing payload fraction. |
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These facilities manufactured wings for the Airbus family of aircraft. |
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It has large eyes, a big head, a short neck, and broad wings. |
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Its plumage is mottled tawny to brown with a barred tail and wings. |
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Paragliders and paper aeroplanes have no frames in their wings. |
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A superly adorned creature, the Callithea Markii, having wings of a thick texture, coloured sapphire, blue, and orange, was only an occasional visitor. |
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The exteriors of these superplanes will be made of glass. The plane will have a glass fuselage, glass wings, glass ailerons and glass stabilizers. |
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