Flame nasturtium with scarlet flowers followed by bright blue berries, is perfect for a sunny wall. |
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Flame crashed into tree trunks, burning moss and driving away moles and field mice. |
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Yes, as the cover cheekily proclaims, The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana is an illustrated novel. |
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Signora Zarini is offering a huge reward for anyone who returns the Flame Diamond to her. |
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Also on the comeback trail are the original 1980s girl band, The Bangles, after their hit Eternal Flame enjoyed a new lease of life courtesy of Atomic Kitten. |
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There will be many poignant moments before the Olympic Flame, which has been burning in the cauldron since the opening of the Games, is extinguished. |
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Moths and the Flame seems to be the crowdpleaser here, having matinee and evening performances. |
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The company had a very elaborate number called Peron's Latest Flame, which musicalizes the opposition to Eva as she begins her climb to the top. |
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He watched with amazement and relief as the men, his men, his heroes, reconsecrated the temple and rekindled the Ner Tamid, the Eternal Flame. |
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The first is Phlox Flame, consisting of several colours, some with a contrasting eye, and can reflower if dead headed. |
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After lunch at the Flame Tree, you can check out the fantastic show, It's Tough To Be A Bug, or you can take a ride on the Kali River Rapids. |
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Tenders are invited for Velox Gl 50 Gas Testing Flame Safety Lamps,Dgms Approved. |
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Crowd-pleasing beagle Miss P was the best hound and Flame the standard poodle won in the nonsporting category. |
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Months before each Games, the Olympic Flame is lit in Olympia in a ceremony that reflects ancient Greek rituals. |
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I am pleased to submit this letter as a representative of the American Chemistry Council Brominated Flame Retardants Industry Panel. |
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And the Daily Post has teamed up with Flame Tree Publishing to offer readers the chance to win one of five copies of the book. |
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Applied metal oxide patinations settle in the groves and recesses caused by scoring, creating an organically controlled surface as seen in Flame. |
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Flame sterilisation is a frequently used technique in the microbiology laboratory and Bunsen burners are commonly used to provide the flame. |
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The second rifle is the original Flame gun built by Robbie Barrkman's shop. |
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Flame was designed primarily as spyware to poke around inside Iranian computers and report back on what was going on. |
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Everyone wanted the odds-on Flame Gun ridden by the Noble Lord Oaksey. |
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Once complete, the Avenue will be lined with vibrant Flame trees, which will lead to a sculptured memorial paying tribute to our fallen soldiers in Afghanistan. |
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Whether your tastes are traditional, ultra contemporary or somewhere in-between, you're sure to find a fireplace as individual as you are at Hestia or Flame. |
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She attended RADA when she was 18,and went on to play the lead in several television series, including The Enigma Files and The Flame Trees of Thika. |
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Spanning an expansive 370 hectares, phase A also includes other communities such as Lime Tree Valley, Sanctuary Falls, Whispering Pines and Flame Tree Ridge, among others. |
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Flame Bait is a message deliberately intended to be controversial. |
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The end result of the moult produced a dragon with powerful wings and the ability to shoot steaming jets of molten flame from its mouth. |
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It is some native cowardice or womanishness which has rendered me subject to the flame of filial grief. |
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Come here at sunset, when the colours flame in red and orange, bold and beautiful. |
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Unfortunately, the color of my face was only intensified by my flame red hair. |
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A piece of wood dropped on the dying embers in the fire soon burst into flame. |
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His flame red hair was unruly, but his attempts to check that unruliness were evident. |
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In the flickering light Alex's pale hair was made flame, his alabaster skin held a rosy glow almost lifelike in its warmth. |
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Most modern stoves are airtight and allow the amount of combustion air that feeds the flame to be controlled. |
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Strands of the light whiplashed round the mindscape, and the blue flame recoiled. |
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The red carpeting was aflame as well, and tapestries and banners hanging from the high ceiling had also begun to catch flame. |
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Sometimes he would see the Bunsen burners on, the shooting blue flame and jet white heat. |
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A little flower of light glowed around my hand as I lowered the flame down to the candle and lit it. |
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Picking up a small match to light a candle, Mary hesitated before setting the fresh wick to flame. |
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In his hands he held a red candle with a wick that burned with a dancing flame. |
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Five wicks create a tall flame like a blow torch which makes a soft roaring noise. |
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He took his lighter from his pocket and flicked it, and touched the small steady butane flame to the wick of the candle. |
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Waving his right hand over the candle, the wick suddenly flickered, then formed into a flame, which lit his cold room. |
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It went up in a burst of flame, and only a smoking shell remained when the flames faded. |
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White could feel the disappointment curling off of him like smoke from a dying flame. |
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This tine the flame stayed, but instead of warm orange, yellow or red it was black. |
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In the distance two shells slid on the thin flame of sunlight like slender water beetles. |
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We use the heat produced by the burning of acetylene in the flame of the oxyacetylene torch to make welds. |
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Attached to the end of a wooden staff, they might shoot jets of flame at attackers. |
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Propane weeders, which kill plants by searing them with a flame, should be used with extreme caution. |
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The Olympic flame, which left Athens on June 2, will arrive in London from Paris a week on Saturday. |
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It was not the warm, gentle radiance of a flame, but an eerie, greenish glow whose essence was cold and lifeless. |
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The dragon immediately stood, stretching its wings majestically and soared into the dark sky like a black shadow chasing a flame. |
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Piercing the meat with a fork can release juices and fat that can cause flame flare-ups. |
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Tara held a small piece of twisted cloth soaked in oil over the little flame and the oil soaked cloth caught alight. |
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Wreathed in flame with its fiery eyes flashing, the giant wolf-like creature uttered one long, deafening howl and began advancing slowly, menacingly. |
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Other parts of the curriculum are delivered in food technology workshops with naked flame gas cookers and resistant material workshops with woodwork and metalwork equipment. |
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She was a skinny girl with flame red hair and a million freckles. |
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Families that do build petty empires flame out, but the grand empire ruled by our churning elites burns on, evidently, forever. |
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On Sunday 2 June, the wherry Albion will carry the original Millennium flame from where it has been carefully kept alight, in Great Yarmouth's St Nicholas Church. |
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As she watched, he placed the end of the cigarette into his mouth and proceeded to light it, cupping his hand around the flame and the end of the stick. |
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The small rectangle of silver metal clicked against his claws as he flipped the lid open, the electric spark igniting the gas in a blue flame that wavered in a draught. |
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Looking out the window, I can see an orange flame of whimsical light skimming the horizon, and hues of blue to grey look down benignly from above. |
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I suggested the use of radial lines emanating from the flame. |
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Primitive lamps, which relied on capillary action to deliver oil or melted fat up a wick to the flame, were improved only marginally in form and material over many centuries. |
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Many organic farmers use flame weeders as an alternative to herbicides. |
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When Darwin's book The Origin of Species was published in 1859, his brother Erasmus sent a copy to his old flame Harriet Martineau. |
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But the sport is an old flame for romantic types, as proved by numbers even sabermetric lords can wrap their seamheads around. |
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And when forty years were expired, there appeared to him in the wilderness of mount Sina an angel of the Lord in a flame of fire in a bush. |
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Soon the rocket was out of sight, and the flame was only seen as a tiny twinkle of light. |
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Besides antimony trioxide, Oxychem produces the flame retardants Dechlorane Plus, Pyronil 45, and sodium antimonate. |
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Who was that lithe, bendable gymnast setting alight the Olympic flame? |
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Reactive brominated flame retardants include tetrabromobisphenol A and tetrabromophthalic anhydride for epoxies and unsaturated polyesters. |
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But the most meaningful flame was the one lit by Nelson Mandela in his old jail cell on Robben Island, where he spent 18 long years in prison. |
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They dissolve in a plastic melt and then recrystallize on cooling to form a network that can enhance mechanical properties and flame resistance. |
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The mass is then exposed to direct flame, which evaporates nearly all of the remaining chloride. |
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As the bagpiper began to play Amazing Grace, Baker initiated the candle-lighting and participants passed the flame from one person to another. |
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New flame retardant products have been introduced by Lati, Teknor Apex and Ticona. |
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There's no foulup so lame that keepers of the flame like Andrew Bacevich, the modern Alibi Ike, can't excuse, spin and downplay. |
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We may flame each other out every couple of weeks, but woe to anyone who steals our angstfic and puts FRAN DRESCHER in the Scully role! |
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What brings the tears to other eyes But freezes them in mine, And what bechills another heart Fans into flame my own. |
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Besides the basic black dress, Chanelisms include pearls, sling-back pumps in beige and white, gold chains, and flame red and navy suit braiding. |
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The miner knew the old davy was safer than any open flame, but far riskier than a modern flashlight. |
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Attempts to fuse and defluorinate rock phosphate by feeding the finely ground material into the flame of a blast lamp were not successful. |
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Fire burst from its open mouth, its eyes glowed with a smouldering glare, its muzzle and hackles and dewlap were outlined in flickering flame. |
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Spirits, by distillations, may be drawn out of vegetable juices, which shall flame and fume of themselves. |
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For should its faint pulsations cease Ere he had coated it with grease, His God would clutch it, and condemn The fiendling to eternal flame. |
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Restarting in flight is a very important engine capability for all aircraft, as occasionally engines do flame out. |
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The flame-retardant used on the child's pajamas would keep them from bursting into flame, but it caused a rash. |
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At times when there was inadequate sunlight to focus through the lens, the king struck flintstones to ignite the flame in the same way. |
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It will be seen that all the explosives stemmed with coal-dust, gas being absent, produced flame except grisoutite. |
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The climax was reached with the celebration of the flame of Reason in Notre Dame Cathedral on 10 November. |
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If the increasing air mass flow reduces the fuel ratio below certain value, flame extinction occurs. |
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A divination based on the observation of the movements of the flame of a lamp was called lampadomancy. |
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I came back and back to the same bad relationship, like a moth to the flame. |
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Workmen should never use open flame near thatch, and nothing should be burnt that could fly up the chimney and ignite the surface of the thatch. |
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Not all compounds that produce a colored flame are appropriate for coloring fireworks, however. |
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In 1817, bare flame gaslight had replaced the former candles and oil lamps that lighted the Covent Garden stage. |
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Limelight used a block of quicklime heated by an oxygen and hydrogen flame. |
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Though the flame has been an Olympic symbol since 1928, the torch relay was only introduced at the 1936 Summer Games to promote the Third Reich. |
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The countdown to the start of the Olympics began with a ceremony for the lighting of the Olympic flame in Olympia, Greece. |
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On the flight the flame was carried inside 4 miners lamps supplied by Protector Lamp of Eccles, Greater Manchester. |
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The air is pumped out of the bulb, and the evacuation tube in the stem press is sealed by a flame. |
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His spirit moved like a flame over the continent and the century, and stirs a million souls in every generation. |
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The German chemist Robert Bunsen and physicist Gustav Kirchhoff discovered caesium in 1860 by the newly developed method of flame spectroscopy. |
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There was a flash like flame and the helm burst asunder. The orc fell with cloven head. |
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During World War II a petroleum warfare site consisting of four flame throwers were located on 'A' Head. |
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The wood is used for fuel, being easy to saw and to split with an axe, producing a hot flame and good embers when burnt. |
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The cross over the door and the flame before the icons are believed to confer the Risen Lord's protection on the household. |
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The ancient Chinese created oil lamps with a refillable reservoir and a fibrous wick, giving the lamp a controlled flame. |
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One should either feel a puff of air or see a flicker of the candle flame with pin that one does not get with spin. |
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If a flame is held before the lips while these words are spoken, it flickers more during aspirated nitrate than during unaspirated night rate. |
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Among the numerous flowers and shrubs are hibiscus, flame lily, snake lily, spider lily, leonotus, cassia, tree wisteria and dombeya. |
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The flame of independence is lit by the president after parades by the presidential family and members of the armed forces of Zimbabwe. |
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Anthracite ignites with difficulty and burns with a short, blue, and smokeless flame. |
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The tip of the burner was made out of lead which absorbed heat causing the flame to be smaller in size. |
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It was discovered that the flame would burn brighter if straight metal was mixed with other components, such as porcelain. |
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The fishtail burner is a relative to the flat burner but it managed to create a brighter flame and conducted less heat. |
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If a naked flame was thus enclosed totally by such a gauze, then methane could pass into the lamp and burn safely above the flame. |
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The height of the cone of burning methane in a flame safety lamp can be used to estimate the concentration of the gas in the local atmosphere. |
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Until the development of effective electric lamps in the early 1900s miners used flame lamps to provide illumination. |
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It is held at arm's length at floor level in one hand, the other hand shielding out all except the tip of the flame. |
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In the Davy system a gauze surrounds the flame and extends for a distance above forming a cage. |
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The Clanny configuration uses a short glass section around the flame with a gauze cylinder above it. |
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Air is drawn in and descends just inside the glass, passing up through the flame in the centre of the lamp. |
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Further observations of the speed of flame fronts in fissures and passageways led him to design a lamp with fine tubes admitting the air. |
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Were the flame to go out in a lamp, then there was a temptation for the collier to relight it. |
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It was quickly discovered that an air current could cause the flame to pass through the gauze. |
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The flame playing directly on the gauze heats it faster than the heat can be conducted away, eventually igniting the gas outside the lamp. |
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If firedamp is drawn into the flame it will burn more brightly and if the proportions are correct may even detonate. |
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The flame on reaching the gauze fails to pass through and so the mine atmosphere is not ignited. |
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However, if the flame is allowed to play on the gauze for a significant period, then it will heat up, sometimes as far as red heat. |
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A sudden draught will case a localised hot spot and the flame will pass through. |
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The flame is surrounded by a glass tube surmounted by a gauze capped cylinder. |
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Air enters from the side above the glass and flows down to the flame before rising to exit at the top of the lamp. |
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Turning down the wick eventually released the base, but by then the flame was extinguished and therefore safe. |
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Later models had graduated shields by which the deputy could determine the concentration of firedamp from the heightening of the flame. |
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A tapered glass cylinder surrounds the flame, and above that the body is a brass tube. |
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It is drawn down through the gauze then passes the flame and ascends the chimney. |
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It ignites readily, burning with a smoky flame characteristic of aromatic compounds. |
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The methods for evaluating flame and fire retardancy of these materials have been already established. |
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Quite frankly, I'd sooner have my meat and two veg blowtorched by James Bond's old flame Auric Goldfinger. |
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Spanning from the weird to the wonderful, discoveries this year have included the bizarre Amphioxus and the beautiful yet elusive brightly-coloured flame shell. |
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Friends and family often gather for hours to slowly stir their bread on long forks in the cauldron of cheese known as a caquelon, which is heated by a small flame. |
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Investigation of chlorine pesticides, alkyl phenols, alkyl phosphates, PAHs, phthalates, organotins, brominated flame retardants and synthetic complexing agents. |
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He also pleaded guilty to publishing instructions on how to make a flame thrower out of a water pistol but denied one count of soliciting to murder. |
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Trim the wick fairly short, so that the flame does not smoke. |
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Too often, in the years between 800 and 1050, the everyday sun declined through the smirch of flame and smoke of a monastery or town robbed and burnt. |
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On the other hand, care must also be taken that hay is never exposed to any possible source of heat or flame, as dry hay and the dust it produces are highly flammable. |
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The modern lampworker uses a flame of oxygen and propane or natural gas. |
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Davy conceived of using an iron gauze to enclose a lamp's flame, and so prevent the methane burning inside the lamp from passing out to the general atmosphere. |
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The bottom of the chimney has a glass bell covering the flame. |
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Davy experimented with brass gauze, determining the maximum size of the gaps and the optimum wire thickness to prevent a flame passing through the gauze. |
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This was then singed over a gas flame, then bleached and or dyed. |
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To douse the flame, the float is carefully pressed down into the oil. |
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The rest of the people I flame either insult me for something they misinterpreted and didn't care to ask me about, or act like a little pissbaby and badmouth other people. |
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In 2000, Aboriginal sprinter Cathy Freeman lit the Olympic flame at the opening ceremony of the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, and went on to win the 400 metres at the Games. |
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Density contrasts between different sedimentary layers, such as between sand and clay, can result in flame structures or load casts, formed by inverted diapirism. |
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Evaporate 25 cc. of orthophosphoric acid solution to dryness, setting the burner beneath the dish and adjusting the flame so that the tip does not quite touch the dish. |
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There are nationally important horse mussel and brittlestar beds in the sea lochs and in 2012 a bed of 100 million flame shells was found during a survey of Loch Alsh. |
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Lightning is a great flame, very bright, extending every way to a great distance, suddenly darting upwards, there ending, so that it is only momentaneous. |
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A week ago the feelings of the British people were fused in a single flame of admiration for the courage and apparent success of the Hungarian revolt. |
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Ananias, Azarias, and Misael, by beleeuing were saued out of the flame. |
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Despite a long history of ethnic mixing, ethnic tensions have been growing in recent years, with politicians using a xenophobic discourse and fanning the flame of nationalism. |
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The president of the organising committee and the IOC president make their closing speeches, the Games are officially closed, and the Olympic flame is extinguished. |
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She was like a Balinese leyak, one of the spirits of humans most often seen in the form of a blue flame that darts from coconut tree to coconut tree, at night. |
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I wrote my first story about the ghost of a horse leaping from a cascade of flame just after the leonids had been more torrential than men had remembered them for centuries. |
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They tend to burn with a sooty flame, and many have a sweet aroma. |
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From the Campagna and the Latin hills, the flame of rebellion spread to Antium and Terracina, and to the most remote allies of the Romans, the cities of the Campanian plains. |
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The people had stared in awe at the magnificently colored flame tree. |
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The main blaze of it is past, but a small thing would make it flame again. |
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I wet the rod and measured the stuff into the top and and by that time the water was steaming. I filled the lower half of the dingus and set it on the flame. |
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It had a slender stem several feet high, and from its top stood up a single tongue of flame, an intensely red flower of the size and shape of a small corn-cob. |
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Lightly seasoned and grilled over an open flame, the patties are slapped on a fresh-baked kaiser roll and finished with standard issue condiments. |
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