I stayed with him as they put the little cone over his nose to send him to kitty la-la land and all was well. |
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Typically built in a conifer, often near cones or knots or on an old cone base, the nest can easily be mistaken for a cone. |
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The new mound seems to have been built in stages producing the effect of a stepped cone. |
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Its pathogenesis is thought to involve cone and amacrine cell dysfunction in the retina. |
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Repeated and prolonged asymmetric filopodial retraction does not alter growth cone direction. |
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Dousing myself in the pool offered about the same amount of refreshment as a melted ice-cream cone. |
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The cone specimens are mostly compressed or adpressed in preservation but their carbonized remains contain ribbed pollen. |
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Behind them, the stone-and-snow cone of Mount Erebus vents its volcanic breath, reminding them there is land here. |
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For an extra treat, fill each cone with candies, then seal the open end with a vanilla wafer attached with decorator icing. |
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The cone shaped tip is just under one micrometer in length and has a radius of a few nanometers at its apex. |
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Most mollusks use the radula to break up food, but the cone snail uses it to inject venom. |
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For the case of a finite-dimensional real linear space these are infinite systems whose adjoint cone is topologically closed. |
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I really shouldn't have been surprised when I ended up at the ice cream parlor with Mom and my three scoops of rainbow sherbet in a sugar cone. |
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They also painted the torpedo in anti-graffiti paint to hopefully deter any future negative social behaviour and coated the nose cone in a clear metal lacquer. |
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I didn't even care when, in my lifelong battle with being a klutz, I dropped the scoop of ice cream off my ice cream cone on the way back to the car. |
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In those early days, a loudspeaker was set in a plywood basket or frame with a circle cut out for the cone. |
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The rotating band contacts the lands and grooves at the forcing cone. |
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Immovably keyed upon the cranked shaft is a heavy wooden cone pulley. |
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Besides, the cone was probably not exposed to pollen of other lacebarks and the seeds were probably empty or defective, as pines don't do self-pollination well. |
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The horns of cows and sheep grow over a bony core that resembles the horn in shape, so anything with a slightly twisted cone of rough-surfaced bone is unlikely to be human. |
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A row of more than 15 bricks, pieces of concrete, metal poles, wooden stakes and a traffic cone were balanced on the track in a blatant act of sabotage. |
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My telescope gathers about 2,000 times as much light as the unaided eye, enough to activate the cone cells in the human retina, so some color appears. |
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From cone bras at Jean-Paul Gaultier to Doc Martens and crop-tops on Lindsay Lohan and Agyness Deyn, grunge-era fashion is back. |
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For his part, Logan now believes that more than 95 percent of cone bearing trees are infected. |
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Cattle have two kinds of color receptors in the cone cells of their retinas. |
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There are two to three rods per cone in the fovea centralis but five to six near the optic papilla. |
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The speed of revolution of the spindle must vary, as the faller is guiding the thread upon the larger or smaller diameter of the cone of the cop. |
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When the cone is carefully lifted off, the enclosed material slumps a certain amount, owing to gravity. |
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One of these methods includes placing the cone on the narrow end and observing how the mix flows through the cone while it is gradually lifted. |
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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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Some had a pointed slate roof, while others had a lead cone, which collected rain water for drinking. |
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The top of the fell resembles a truncated cone, cut off at an angle and sloping away to the south. |
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This cone in turn stands upon a much broader upland plateau which stretches away five miles to the south west. |
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This is Seatallan's principal satellite, a broad ridge falling from the east of the summit cone. |
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From this direction it appears as a truncated cone, steep sided with a wide level top. |
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The crushed ore, suspended in water was introduced onto a central cone and spread outwards over a slightly inclined conical surface. |
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There was the cone with vanilla ice cream and a semihard hood of nut-sprinkled chocolate over that. |
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The kids used a traffic safety cone to play their first full game of tee ball. |
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The researchers determined flowability by using a fixed funnel method and a free-standing cone method of angle of repose measurement. |
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The researchers determined that the studied sharks, in this case two wobbegong species, are cone monochromats. |
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Analysis of CD59 antibodies on antiglycophorin A gated erythrocytes was used to identify erythrocyte PNH cone size. |
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Up to 11 vascular bundles are coplanarly arranged in the middle part of a cone scale. |
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Typically, damage initiates at the smaller crosssection end of the truncated cone. |
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The refuse is discharged through the cone on to the refuse screen, where it is desanded and dewatered. |
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At the junction with the main corridor was a single downlighter which dropped a cone of light onto the apex. |
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At the front of the engine, a simple translating axisymmetric shock cone inlet slows the air to subsonic speeds using two shock reflections. |
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To stain photoreceptors of the dorsal rim area, the cornea and crystalline cone layer of the DRA were removed using a microscalpel. |
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Finally, there is uncertainty surrounding the bronze pine cone in the chapel, and where it was created. |
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They are specialist feeders on conifer cones, and the unusual bill shape is an adaptation to assist the extraction of the seeds from the cone. |
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The male cone and unfertilized female cone are called male flower and female flower, respectively. |
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The female cone develops two ovule, each of which contains haploid haploid megaspores. |
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The female cone then opens, releasing the seeds which grow to a young seedling. |
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The peristyle serves to buttress both the inner dome and the brick cone which rises internally to support the lantern. |
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Through this hole can be seen the decorated inner surface of the cone which supports the lantern. |
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This upper space is lit by the light wells in the outer dome and openings in the brick cone. |
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He reached into his pocket and pulled out, of all things, an ice cream cone. |
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The southern cone of South America and Alaskan peninsula of North America are other examples. |
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Venetz warned the inhabitants of the valley of the danger as water was also escaping from the base of the cone. |
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The spiral growth of branches, needles, and cone scales are arranged in Fibonacci number ratios. |
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Another spruce with smoothly rounded cone scales and hairy shoots occurs rarely in the Central Alps in eastern Switzerland. |
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For a solid shape such as a sphere, cone, or cylinder, the area of its boundary surface is called the surface area. |
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The cone of force often leaves a distinctive bulb of applied force on the flake and a corresponding flake scar on the core. |
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The pommel is either a cone of metal or a crutch with a whorl ending either arm. |
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I intoned into a Belisha beacon or the top of a traffic cone to get the resonance. |
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The shaping of the logotype playfully mimics the shape of the cone, with a large 'C' at the top end, tailing off to the 'tto' at the tip. |
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The waitress demonstrated with practised ease the technique of folding the betel leaf into a cone. |
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The incense dough is then pressed into shaped forms to create cone and smaller coiled incense, or forced through a hydraulic press for solid stick incense. |
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At impact, concentric radii emanate from the point of percussion, but unlike conchoidal fracture, the force travels along what would be the center of the Hertzian cone. |
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Similarly, if a cut is made along the side of a cone, the side surface can be flattened out into a sector of a circle, and the resulting area computed. |
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Norway spruce cone scales are used as food by the caterpillars of the tortrix moth Cydia illutana, whereas Cydia duplicana feeds on the bark around injuries or canker. |
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In that case each of the equations describes a spherical cone, with the cusp located at the satellite, and the base a sphere around the satellite. |
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Porpoises do, however, lack short wavelength sensitive visual pigments in their cone cells indicating a more limited capacity for colour vision than most mammals. |
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Dolphins do, however, lack short wavelength sensitive visual pigments in their cone cells indicating a more limited capacity for color vision than most mammals. |
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After fertilization, the conelet is considered an immature cone. |
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For example, the signer in the DGS example in uses a relational lexeme next-to, in addition to the SASS construction, to locate the red cone next to the yellow one. |
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Conifer seeds develop inside a protective cone called a strobilus. |
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Mayon Volcano, despite being dangerously active, holds the record of the world's most perfect cone which is built from past and continuous eruption. |
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Some pollen grains will land on a female cone for pollination. |
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Nothing could be more exciting and exhilarating than a slide, on sleigh or toboggan, from the lofty summit of the ice-mound or cone down to its base. |
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Hiri island is a volcanic cone lying off the northern tip of Ternate. |
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