Isn't it nice when your guy opens the door for you and slides the Cabernet Sauvignon into your balloon glass? |
|
The balloon began losing helium during inflation aboard the launch ship Triton, around 20 miles off St Ives, west Cornwall. |
|
His neighbour Eric Gilbert also saw the object and suggested it could be a weather balloon. |
|
Initially, the government tried to pass off the debris found at the crash site as a weather balloon bearing a radar target panel. |
|
The Oliviers lived out at Collondale in their youth and watched every day as a weather balloon was released from the airport. |
|
On arriving there Peter and Chris got out of the vans and sent up a weather balloon to watch the wind direction. |
|
In 1947, an object which crashed near Roswell in the USA was a weather balloon according to the US Army Air Force. |
|
From the ground, a large weather balloon at an altitude of 30 kilometers appears as a star. |
|
The U.S. Army made the official announcement that the sighting and wreckage was a weather balloon. |
|
The Port Elizabeth weather office said there wasn't a weather balloon in that area and no calls reporting UFOs had been received. |
|
Other adventurers came to grief here in 1897 after a failed attempt to fly a balloon from the North Pole. |
|
The millionaire adventurer was the first person to circle the globe solo in a hot-air balloon. |
|
As a result, the belly swells up like a hot-air balloon, and this condition is called as aerophagy. |
|
Using a balloon whisk or small hand-held electric whisk, whisk slowly and steadily until the mixture starts to turn a pale cream colour. |
|
The young-at-heart are sure to enjoy the bouncy castle in Brindleyplace plus the face painting, inflatable sumo wrestling and balloon modelling. |
|
I spent a huge sum of money to become a Java programmer, and now I'm whoring myself out making balloon animals at bar mitzvahs. |
|
Before long, the hot air inside the balloon is less dense than the cool air that surrounds it. |
|
A balloon shade is a soft, blousy window treatment that can add a decorative flair to any room. |
|
Balloons, like airships, get their lift from a structure containing a gas that is less dense than the air surrounding the balloon. |
|
At top center is a woman in a camisole with a thought balloon above her head depicting a recumbent figure. |
|
|
The pumpkin-shaped balloon is composed of a lightweight polyethylene film about the thickness of ordinary plastic food wrap. |
|
He flew into a severe storm, his balloon was wrecked, and he plummeted seaward from the sky. |
|
Pilots rely on the different wind directions at different heights to ' steer ' the balloon. |
|
The blue shades of balloon flowers are striking when planted in combination with gold or deep orange cosmos or yarrows. |
|
After my ex flew the coop, I tied my wedding ring to a helium balloon and let it loose in the wild blue yonder. |
|
Larger bottles were made too, whose shape resembled an inflated balloon or bladder. |
|
The last attempt at vouchers, for nursery education, went down like a lead balloon. |
|
As you can imagine, that suggestion of mine went over like a lead balloon among my fellow journalists. |
|
My last caption competition went down like a lead balloon, so I'm hesitant to offer a prize. |
|
The film is a cumbersome, wayward commercial endeavor that goes over like a lead balloon before plummeting into insignificance. |
|
The administration has, in fact, stopped talking about the president's amnesty proposal because it went over like a lead balloon. |
|
Then there's the proposal of an eighteen-month pay freeze, and that too has gone down like a lead balloon within union ranks. |
|
Predictably the news has gone down like a lead balloon, and not just among those who will be axed. |
|
That leisurely pace is what makes a balloon ride such a satisfying experience. |
|
The balloon is usually introduced retrogradely via the femoral artery and passed across the aortic valve. |
|
You can also enjoy rock climbing, horseback riding, shopping runs, street fairs, and hot air balloon rides. |
|
A light transmitter, weighing about a pound, is carried up by the balloon at a known ascensional rate. |
|
A gutsy group of Ukrainians has made the world's first underground balloon ascent in a disused coal mine in Doneck. |
|
As the balloon began its historic ascent, someone nearby questioned the usefulness of this new invention. |
|
Wind measurements were performed every 4 h by tracking the ascent of a pilot balloon by radar. |
|
|
May 20, 1910, was one of a series of days on which weather observations were collected from coordinated balloon ascents all over Europe. |
|
At the end of its ascent, the balloon bursts from the lack of air pressure in near space. |
|
Data produced by these balloon ascents result in data that is applied to the guns, improving accuracy of fire. |
|
As the balloon continued its ascent, propelled by the heat from the flames, gas tanks inside the balloon ignited and caused an explosion. |
|
In July 1925 Friedmann made a record-breaking ascent in a balloon to 7400 metres to make meteorological and medical observations. |
|
But the finality in Angela's voice deflated that hope like air rushing from a popped balloon. |
|
A breast cyst is a fluid-filled sac, like a tiny balloon, inside the breast. |
|
Everybody who takes part will be entered in a draw for all sorts of prizes from a computer to a journey by hot air balloon. |
|
An expert at balloon sculpture was a big hit with the kids who wanted made-to-order balloons that resembled animals and birds. |
|
The unit controls balloon axial movement and rotation with respect to the laser beam. |
|
In that moment he could scarcely breathe, and yet the air was filling his lungs like an inflated balloon, stretching them painfully. |
|
Too much backspin makes the ball balloon, and sidespin sends it into that lake over there. |
|
This balloon was of man-made fibers and was filled with air heated by a propane flame. |
|
It was a great week for candle makers, cake bakers and balloon manufacturers. |
|
I longed to tell her that dreams can lose their buoyancy, like a gas balloon weighted with too much ballast, sandbagged by too many years. |
|
This event marked a downfall of popularity for the hot air balloon, and an increase in popularity, ironically, in hydrogen. |
|
The package contained a funny hat, a stick on mustache, and a bouncing balloon with the rubber band on it. |
|
Yet, it was not until 1783 that the Montgolfier brothers in France first overcame gravity in their hot-air balloon. |
|
A puppy dropped by parachute from a hot-air balloon descends safely into the garden of a secret convent. |
|
There was enough gossip going around to fill a hot air balloon, but I was happy to say I was never the topic. |
|
|
Marc Sluszny is a record-holder in bungee jumping from a hot-air balloon and in aerobatics hang-gliding. |
|
Another surreal moment came during the middle of a hot-air balloon ride over Serengeti National Park. |
|
But all in all, I could understand hot-air balloon aviators' fascination with the sport. |
|
The blast of red hot air filled the balloon, lifting them high into the air. |
|
Then the group hopped out of the hot air balloon basket and looked upwards towards the dark, gloomy sky. |
|
Just as an object less dense than water rises to the surface, our balloon filled with hot air rises through the surrounding air. |
|
One of the hot air balloon races he participated in produced a record-breaking trip from Japan to California. |
|
It is a big aircraft, which acts more like a hot air balloon than airplane, because of its slow speed and reactions. |
|
The original version is censored, using goofy Batman inspired cartoon balloon words to block out some excessively gory details. |
|
It was finished artwork, and they would ask me to, you know, insert a comma in a word balloon. |
|
Practically every panel in the book has something, often a word balloon, but sometimes an arm or a piece of clothing, poking out over the edge. |
|
As in comic strips, dots trail up to the balloon, indicating you are thinking. |
|
How many times have I seen the kitten looking at the goldfish in the brandy balloon, or the kitten hanging from a tree branch? |
|
On the table in front of him stood a balloon glass of great capacity filled with white wine. |
|
Czech puppet theatre company tells the story of three babies in gigantic white romper suits as they lose their balloon. |
|
The dog's comments are audible and visible in a cartoon balloon. |
|
But soon before he could get to work, he lost control of the balloon he had designed and built himself. |
|
A ride in a ski lift crafted to look like a flying hot-air balloon even brought visitors to the vantage point of a flying monkey. |
|
When the heater kicks on, it fills your robe like a hot-air balloon. |
|
The clay sculpture, however, has gone down like a lead balloon with some worshippers who are to ask for it to be removed or covered up during services. |
|
|
A balloon popped and the sound was enough like a gunshot to make everybody jump. |
|
Later we had a frozen coconut balloon, which was coconut milk frozen to the inside of a balloon, then the balloon peeled off. |
|
She had grown so perfect and gentle and consoling that it was unbearable, she was a big, round smooth balloon without a face. |
|
Perhaps she was trying to distance herself from the Chloe image, but the outfits, which included T-shirts with cockney rhyming slang, went down like a lead balloon. |
|
The deal threw a lifeline to more than 150 employees as well as thousands of customers who hold vouchers for activities such as hot air balloon flights and bungee jumping. |
|
The reply to Greeley was, as noted, a trial balloon, whose purpose was to test the reaction of the public to these alternatives. |
|
Or one year before, a then 16-year-old Bieber narrowly avoided arrest after pelting a Maryland state trooper with a water balloon. |
|
Jeff Koons takes knotted balloon dogs and enlarges them in stainless steel. |
|
Here's hoping this guy's business goes over like a lead balloon. |
|
Prizes should be delivered to the TV director who cut to their box in time to catch him grinning like a loon, boffing a balloon about with his feet and hands. |
|
The team plays an important role in ensuring the balloon is prepared and filled to suit the timing of the launch and to ensure the envelope is ready for take off. |
|
As the air filled the sac, the balloon took on an impossibly long shape. |
|
He would ride across the District of Columbia on his black horse, Dan Webster, or survey the countryside from a hot-air balloon. |
|
The first time around, there was a hot-air balloon, a lake, and a waterfall. |
|
Norman told me he had lost everything except his ship's papers, kept in a survival bag made of watertight barrage balloon material and hung around his neck. |
|
The glider is designed to be launched from a weather balloon. |
|
Even if Tim Cook, the new CEO, proves as able as he has been as acting CEO, the balloon will deflate. |
|
This was never a bubble that was going to pop, it was a balloon that has now deflated. |
|
Despite high procedural success and excellent angiographic results with oversized balloon catheters, the long-term clinical outcome of SVG stent implantation is suboptimal. |
|
Suddenly a hot-air balloon, with a young child in it, appears to be coming down in the field, followed by others running at full pelt, trying to aid a safe landing. |
|
|
I thought that being confined to a brandy balloon, they were just tired. |
|
Jet streams can divide into branches without warning, carrying a balloon far off course. |
|
He regretfully admitted that his trial balloon for a joint Bet Din including all 3 groups had collapsed. |
|
The popular Snoopy balloon will not float down the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade route this year. |
|
The Germans were forced into a pocket, the shape of a deflating balloon. |
|
This is followed by 36 monthly payments of pounds 129 with an optional balloon payment of pounds 2,683 to keep the car at the end of the term. |
|
At the end of the contract, this final balloon payment is made and the vehicle becomes yours. |
|
The loan called for repayment in five years with amortization over 15 years and a balloon payment. |
|
Although the balloon payment in this transaction comes after five years, an even later balloon payment could work. |
|
All loans are fully amortized with no balloon payments or pre-payment penalties, which enable the borrower to secure a low monthly payment. |
|
Small businesses facing maturity of commercial mortgages or balloon payments before Dec. |
|
Commercial real estate mortgages often have balloon payments due as the mortgages terminate. |
|
Terms like swing loans with balloon payments and seller participation became part of the real estate deal-making lexicon. |
|
The new rule will allow loans to be rescheduled with balloon payments under certain circumstances, provided a current appraisal is performed. |
|
Most title loan companies use balloon payments to the disadvantage of the consumer. |
|
According to Rahn, the special properties of blackcurrant seed oil and balloon vine extract, in combination with sunflower. |
|
I also remember part of our duties, one night a week, was to guard the barrage balloon situated at the top of Daventry Road in Cheylesmore. |
|
The first balloon ascent in Britain was made by James Tytler on 25 August 1784 at Edinburgh, Scotland, in a hot air balloon. |
|
His hydrogen filled balloon took off from a prison yard in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. |
|
On 29 September 1804, Abraham Hopman became the first Dutchman to make a successful balloon flight in the Netherlands. |
|
|
The Aeronaut Badge was established by the United States Army in World War I to denote service members who were qualified balloon pilots. |
|
Yost's improved design for hot air balloons triggered the modern sport balloon movement. |
|
The Echo satellite was a balloon satellite launched into Earth orbit in 1960 and used for passive relay of radio communication. |
|
On 27 May 1931, Auguste Piccard and Paul Kipfer became the first to reach the stratosphere in a balloon. |
|
Ben Abruzzo was the first man to cross the Pacific Ocean in a hot air balloon. |
|
On 31 August 1933, Alexander Dahl took the first picture of the Earth's curvature in an open hydrogen gas balloon. |
|
The balloon was launched by JAXA on 25 May 2002 from Iwate Prefecture, Japan. |
|
Blanchard made his first successful balloon flight in Paris on 2 March 1784, in a hydrogen gas balloon launched from the Champ de Mars. |
|
He holds the record of first balloon flights in Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, and Poland. |
|
On 9 January 1793, Blanchard conducted the first balloon flight in the Americas. |
|
On 20 February 1808 Blanchard had a heart attack while in his balloon at the Hague. |
|
The volume of the balloon in the video shrinks when the trapped gas particles slow down with the addition of extremely cold nitrogen. |
|
He was more than willing to extend the terms of the loan, but his boss decided to play hardball and demanded a balloon payment. |
|
Thus, for example, Steve Fossett's global circumnavigation by balloon was entirely contained within the southern hemisphere. |
|
Historically, balloon framing was used until the 1950s when fire safety concerns made platform framing inherently better. |
|
In some cases, bleach's base acidity compromises a bacterium's lipid membrane, a reaction similar to popping a balloon. |
|
If an airway becomes obstructed by cancer growth, options include rigid bronchoscopy, balloon bronchoplasty, stenting, and microdebridement. |
|
Insects, mostly ants, enter the chamber via the opening underneath the balloon. |
|
The plutocratic-looking balloon with the puddle of unpriceable brandy was mine. |
|
Curtains of vapor drift back to reveal the Americans, volplaning along well inside ten meters and only a little faster than the balloon. |
|
|
The house whirled around two or three times and rose slowly through the air. Dorothy felt as if she were going up in a balloon. |
|
Factors associated with subsequent arch reintervention after initial balloon aortoplasty in patients with Norwood procedure and arch obstruction. |
|
Taking your cues from Koons is like singing inside a balloon. |
|
Also planned are water balloon fights, water guns and other attractions like bungee jumping, a mini aqua park, a DJ arena and a concert. |
|
The images were taken by an on-board GoPro camera housed within a polystyrene capsule, which was tethered to the weather balloon. |
|
But the military soon backtracked and claimed the object they had retrieved was a weather balloon that had crashed on a nearby ranch. |
|
Other attractions are a balloon lotto with a pounds 25 prize, air brush tattoos, face painting and Indian hand painting. |
|
However, balloon angioplasty has an undesired effect on an estimated onethird of those who receive the therapy. |
|
The AVAIL multicenter clinical study enrolled coronary artery disease patients who had a high risk of restenosis following balloon angioplasty. |
|
It was temporarily wrenched from its perch during the Blitz, when it was entangled in the cable of a barrage balloon. |
|
The weight of expectation hung over Westgate Street that day in 2001 like a giant barrage balloon. |
|
I think the new signage is very tasteful especially the seven carved granite cubes by the concrete barrage balloon blocks. |
|
Across the road in the park was an anti-aircraft gun battery with a barrage balloon and searchlight. |
|
For a face, cut out a circle from cardstock Glue on yarn for fur, pompom eyes with felt pupils, a balloon nose, and a rickrack mouth. |
|
Adrien Alexander's Montgolfier Collection was inspired by aerial views of the African landscape, seen from a hot air balloon. |
|
Applying the principle of the stratospheric balloon to oceanographic research, he invented and constructed the bathyscaphe. |
|
The hot air balloon took its inaugural flight in 1783 with two innovative brothers, Joseph and Etienne Montgolfier, at the helm. |
|
After surgery to remove the tumor, the GliaSite RTS balloon catheter is placed inside the space left by the removal of the malignant brain tumor. |
|
Those ignorant of balloon releases are worse than the solitary litter lout, as balloons also become litter. |
|
Awesome clowns, fabulous magicians, live bunny rabbit, balloon animals, comedy magic, face painting, website for pictures. |
|
|
Henri Giffard also developed a tethered balloon for passengers in 1878 in the Tuileries Garden in Paris. |
|
For the school science project, each student will blow up a balloon and then tie it closed. |
|
Man, what a way to pop a balloon full of promise! It was like waiting to be with the girl of your dreams and you end up in the Crying Game. |
|
I thought my idea of a superhero-themed party was a great idea, but it went down like a lead balloon with my friends. |
|
Jenner's trial balloon descended into Kingscote Park, Gloucestershire, owned by Anthony Kingscote, one of whose daughters was Catherine. |
|
It is this euphemistic use of the asterisk that is doubtless responsible for the sign's regular inclusion in the cartoonists maledicta balloon. |
|
The population structure becomes less triangular and more like an elongated balloon. |
|
My family planned to take pictures from the ground as I overflew them in the hot air balloon. |
|
In aeronautics, a balloon is an unpowered aerostat, which remains aloft or floats due to its buoyancy. |
|
The balloon is a fabric envelope filled with a gas that is lighter than the surrounding atmosphere. |
|
This makes it lighter and, if its lifting power is greater than the weight of the balloon containing it, it will lift the balloon upwards. |
|
A hot air balloon can only stay up while it has fuel for its burner, to keep the air hot enough. |
|
They are partially inflated with the light gas before launch, with the gas pressure the same both inside and outside the balloon. |
|
The superpressure balloon cannot change size greatly, and so maintains a generally constant volume. |
|
He developed a combination balloon having two gas bags, the Rozier balloon. |
|
As an alternative to free flight, a balloon may be tethered to allow reliable take off and landing at the same location. |
|
A kite balloon is distinct from a kytoon, which obtains a portion of its lift aerodynamically. |
|
Following Henry Cavendish's 1766 work on hydrogen, Joseph Black proposed that a balloon filled with hydrogen would be able to rise in the air. |
|
On 1 December 1783, Professor Jacques Charles and the Robert brothers made the first gas balloon flight, also from Paris. |
|
There are several war graves from both wars in the graveyard Part of the church spire was knocked down by an escaped barrage balloon during the Second World War. |
|
|
Beta radiation has shown desirable effects in the treatment of restenosis, the regrowth of scar tissue associated with balloon angioplasty failure. |
|
A balloon may be free, moving with the wind, or tethered to a fixed point. |
|
A balloon is conceptually the simplest of all flying machines. |
|
A 67-year-old man was referred for evaluation for possible percutaneous balloon valvuloplasty because of stenosis of a bioprosthesis in the tricuspid valve position. |
|
As the entire balloon is less dense than its surroundings, it rises, taking along with it a basket, attached underneath, which carries passengers or payload. |
|
Although a balloon has no propulsion system, a degree of directional control is possible through making the balloon rise or sink in altitude to find favorable wind directions. |
|
The first military use of a balloon was at the Battle of Fleurus in 1794, when L'Entreprenant was used by the French Aerostatic Corps to watch the movements of the enemy. |
|
The steerable Osseoflex SB balloon is designed to navigate with precision, accuracy, and control within the vertebra to create a central cavity across the sagittal midline. |
|
With a few exceptions, scientific balloon missions are unmanned. |
|
He launched his balloon from the prison yard of Walnut Street Jail in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and landed in Deptford, Gloucester County, New Jersey. |
|
Enjoy a couple's day at the Thermae Bath Spa then fly over the rooftops of the Royal Crescent before drifting out to the surrounding countryside in a hot air balloon. |
|
Then she covered her face and let the balloon sail into the sky. |
|
Those balloon payments, by the way, helped many a retiree set himself up with a small business that was sometimes related to the former employer but was often quite different. |
|
A balloon in space uses internal gas pressure only to maintain its shape. |
|
Despite this, the monthly repayments are still around the same level as competitors' PCP costs and at the end of the three years you own the car with no balloon payment. |
|
The charity BRAINBOX, based at Disability North in Gosforth, Newcastle, organised the balloon release fundraiser at Alnwick Garden in Northumberland over the weekend. |
|
The balloon collided with another balloon mid-air and crashed during a sightseeing tour of volcanic rock formations in Turkey's Cappadocia region on Monday. |
|
Using a small balloon inflated inside the artery at the site of the blockage, physicians can open many blockages in a procedure called an angioplasty. |
|
Anne Scattergood, 77, was being brought from Beaumont Hospital to the Mater in Dublin in July 2009 when an intra-aortic balloon pump stopped working. |
|
The superpressure balloon maintains an altitude of constant density in the atmosphere, and can maintain flight until gas leakage gradually brings it down. |
|
|
I tossed the water balloon and it landed smack-dab on the top of his head. |
|
Gale looked odds-on to notch his ton but on 99 he tried to hoist a long hop outside off-stump from Franks only to balloon a simple catch to Sidebottom at mid-on. |
|
Since it's inflatable, various artworld wags have been plotting how to shoot a dart into its side and watch it flobber down like a great big burst balloon. |
|
The natural spherical shape of a balloon is unstable in high winds. |
|
The spectators gaped helplessly as the balloon approached the power lines. |
|
The balloon was equipped with a burner to create hot air for lift. |
|
A New Zealand lorry driver said he blew up like a balloon when he fell on to the fitting of a compressed air hose that forced air into his body at 100lbs per square inch. |
|
We report a patient who presented with an acute abdomen 7 months after the insertion of an intragastric balloon and discuss the current literature. |
|
This density is the origin of the idiom to go over like a lead balloon. |
|
Finally, there was 60-Second Science in Class 5 where they made flying objects, including paper planes, chemical and water rockets and balloon helicopters. |
|
The two men, originally from Russia and the United States of America respectively, started in Japan and flew with a helium balloon over the Pacific. |
|