For instance, a carpetmaker can lavish the great wools on his expensive $30 a square yard plush. |
|
Lake Manicouagan lies in an astrobleme in central Quebec covering an area of approximately 1206 square miles. |
|
Only 24 hours earlier, air marshal Houston had put the size of the search area at 18,000 square miles. |
|
The Lennon Wall in admiralty is a mosaic of Post-It notes, each square a scribbled wish. |
|
Going back to square one would be an unjust outcome and a prize to the aggressor. |
|
The animal's jaws can exert a pressure of more than 750 pounds per square inch. |
|
Of the approximately 55,000 square miles of land in New York State, less than 500 of them are in New York City. |
|
Paramilitary troops in grey urban camouflage moved into the square, five abreast, forcing demonstrators into side-streets. |
|
The FDA said anyplace where 50 percent of square footage was devoted to preparing and serving food. |
|
Here you have a country of 3 million square miles, nearly all of it empty and eminently bombable. |
|
Surfers from Durban grew up on bunnies. You get the curry in the bread with the removed square chunk, used to dunk back in the curry. |
|
This process has removed several tens of square kilometers of overlying rock in many areas, exposing the once deeply buried batholiths. |
|
We sat down in the central square and drank coffee and a man came up and spoke to us in American. |
|
Upon leaving the center, I photographed the colorful array of petunias decorating the square in purple, pink, yellow, white, and magenta. |
|
After spending six hours on the intake we realized that there was nothing wrong with it, so we are back to square one. |
|
After spending six hours on the intake we realized that there was nothing wrong with it, so we went back to square one. |
|
In shape it is a tiny square box of silver, studded outside with eight small balas-rubies. |
|
Dagobert had only one customer, an American who wore square, rimless glasses and a beige suit and looked like a Wall Street tycoon. |
|
Now and then the street bellies out into an ancient lime-stone square filled with fiacres and peddlers, pausing in the loud sunshine. |
|
Click the large square on the upper right corner of the window to biggify the spreadsheet on your screen. |
|
|
The namesake of the city as the site of the original dam, Dam Square, is the main town square and has the Royal Palace and National Monument. |
|
The northeastern part of the square is bordered by the very large Rijksmuseum. |
|
To the southeast of the square are situated a number of large houses, one of which contains the American consulate. |
|
A parking garage can be found underneath the square, as well as a supermarket. |
|
The Museumplein is covered almost entirely with a lawn, except for the northeastern part of the square which is covered with gravel. |
|
The current appearance of the square was realised in 1999, when the square was remodelled. |
|
The square itself is the most prominent site in Amsterdam for festivals and outdoor concerts, especially in the summer. |
|
Plans were made in 2008 to remodel the square again, because many inhabitants of Amsterdam are not happy with its current appearance. |
|
A common sight on the Leidseplein during summer is a square full of terraces packed with people drinking beer or wine. |
|
The intensity is defined as the square of the amplitude of the oscillations. |
|
He was tall and lean, with lank fair hair and a square jaw, togged out in tweeds and a checked shirt and scuffed, oxblood brogues. |
|
By 2012 Osprey Quay had been transformed with huge investment, offering over 11 hectares, a total of 60,000 square metres of business space. |
|
The examples given are its ability to be beaten into fine foil with just one ounce, producing 750 leaves four inches square. |
|
Most commonly planted in hedgerows, it sometimes occurred in densities of over 1000 per square kilometre. |
|
A shape with an area of three square metres would have the same area as three such squares. |
|
In mathematics, the unit square is defined to have area one, and the area of any other shape or surface is a dimensionless real number. |
|
Every unit of length has a corresponding unit of area, namely the area of a square with the given side length. |
|
The SI unit of area is the square metre, which is considered an SI derived unit. |
|
The Coriolis force is proportional to the rotation rate and the centrifugal force is proportional to its square. |
|
The parabolic shape is because the centripetal force is proportional to the square of the tangential speed. |
|
|
The Earth showing the annual minimum sea ice with a graph overlay showing the annual minimum sea ice area in millions of square kilometers. |
|
John's, is closed to traffic 20 hours per day, and is widely understood to have the most pubs per square foot of any street in North America. |
|
Nodule mining could affect tens of thousands of square kilometers of these deep sea ecosystems. |
|
Human population density was very low, around only one person per square mile. |
|
Plaited rope is made by braiding twisted strands, and is also called square braid. |
|
For these classes, the number refers to the required 5th percentile bending strength in Newtons per square millimetre. |
|
It is recorded that he permitted his depiction with a square halo, then used for the living. |
|
By the year AD 100, more than 400,000 square kilometers were dominated by the Dacians, who numbered two million. |
|
Christmas markets in December are held at the Hamburg Rathaus square, among other places. |
|
The community pieced together a quilt using a square stitched in each household. |
|
The world's largest wetland is the peat bogs of the Western Siberian Lowlands in Russia, which cover more than a million square kilometres. |
|
They are less common in the Southern Hemisphere, with the largest being the Magellanic moorland, comprising some 44,000 square kilometres. |
|
Five numbers were then aligned on the outside top of the square, and five numbers on the left side of the square vertically. |
|
The polka, the square dance, and the Irish step dance are very well known Western forms of folk dance. |
|
It had a foremast with square sails and three other masts with a lateen each, for a total of 4 masts. |
|
The International zone of Tangier had a 373 square kilometer area and, by 1939, a population of about 60,000 inhabitants. |
|
In Asian cultures houses were traditionally laid out in the form of a square oriented toward the four compass directions. |
|
Traditional Arab houses are also laid out as a square surrounding a central fountain that evokes a primordial garden paradise. |
|
Unlike a typical fuchuan warship, the treasure ships had nine staggered masts and twelve square sails, increasing its speed. |
|
In 1962, a large rudderpost indicating a rudder area of 452 square feet was unearthed at the Longjiang Shipyard. |
|
|
The statue of Jan Breydel and Pieter de Coninck, the leaders of the uprising, can still be seen on the Big Market square. |
|
Infantry and horsemen were concealed in the alleyways which opened onto this open square. |
|
The Western Area Urban District, including Freetown, the capital and largest city, has a population density of 1,224 persons per square km. |
|
So defined, a league of land would encompass a square that is one Spanish league on each side. |
|
The voice came from the end of the divan but Hermione, seated square before the fire on a low pouffe did not turn to face its suave producer. |
|
Artigas square, over Gorlero Ave is the place where there is a popular handicraft market. |
|
Ecologically, it is one of the world's 17 megadiverse countries, and the most densely biodiverse of these per square kilometer. |
|
Modern American definitions include vessels without the square sails on the main mast. |
|
It is expected that in 2012 there will be 1,8 million square meters of installed solar thermal panels. |
|
With 71,263 people per square kilometer, Manila is also the most densely populated city proper in the world. |
|
Estimates suggest that during the Formative period the site extended for about 2 square kilometers, with a population of five to ten thousand. |
|
It covered 10 square kilometers and had a population of thirty to fifty thousand. |
|
In front of the plaza, towards the open country, a stone fortress is connected with it by a staircase leading from the square to the fort. |
|
The middle of the town square was used for military activities and folk art, and as a market in the morning. |
|
This list includes all islands found in the geographic Pacific Ocean, with an area larger than 10,000 square kilometers. |
|
The Cossacks positioned themselves in a square formation, and riflemen in the center opened fire. |
|
The square sail and flat bottom meant that they would not sail well without a following wind. |
|
In 2008, the train station was completely renovated, and the adjacent square was reconstructed to include fountains and an underground passage. |
|
However, they were eventually put down on 4 June when PLA troops and vehicles entered and forcibly cleared the square, with many fatalities. |
|
Close to the Pile Gate stands the Big Onofrio's Fountain in the middle of a small square. |
|
|
Furthermore, there is the Piazza Santa Trinita, a square near the Arno that mark the end of the Via de' Tornabuoni street. |
|
It has a large plaza which is considered to have been the main square for the city. |
|
Forty one percent of the population lives in rural areas, with a population density of 18,13 per square kilometer. |
|
Thereafter his definition was refined by Scipione Maffei, who used to refer to this script as distinct from Roman square capitals. |
|
Both are relative terms, and both are generally enclosed in square brackets. |
|
Canadians measure property, both residential and commercial, in square feet exclusively. |
|
Separate developments have produced additional pronunciations in words like square, wash, talk and comma. |
|
A more formal style of writing was based on Roman square capitals, but cursive was used for quicker, informal writing. |
|
This was in fact the ancient version of the mortarboard before the top square was stiffened and the tump replaced by a tassel and button. |
|
A high, wide flight of steps descend from the church to a small yard, or square on the North side of the road. |
|
But Cummins could not square his own dreams of ecumenicity with racial exclusivism. |
|
These benches were positioned in a square as well with the defendant standing in the middle. |
|
In the middle of the square a fountain poured a quavery thread of shining water into its stone font. |
|
The first attempt to square the circle, was made in February 1848, when the young Marquess of Granby was installed as the leader. |
|
North of the Central Lobby is the Commons' Corridor which leads into the square Commons' Lobby, north of which is the House of Commons. |
|
The market square is linked to Abington Street, a major shopping area of Northampton. |
|
This can be seen as a square brick structure between the boiler house and the chimney. |
|
A statue of John Metcalf has been placed in the market square in Knaresborough, across from Blind Jack's pub. |
|
Hay in small square bales is particularly susceptible to this, and is therefore often stored in a hayshed or protected by tarpaulins. |
|
The addition of net wrap, which is not used on square bales, offers even greater weather resistance. |
|
|
The area included in this territory was just under 1 million square miles, more than 80 times the size of Belgium. |
|
It is the first authorised building in the main square which was made of stone to avoid fire incidents. |
|
These buildings surround a small, irregularly shaped square, the Mayor's Garden, from which the rue d'Enghien descends. |
|
Contra dancing and country square dancing are popular throughout New England, usually backed by live Irish, Acadian, or other folk music. |
|
The Rhine originates in a 30 square kilometre area in Switzerland and represents almost 60 percent of water exported from the country. |
|
In practice the hectare is fully derived from the SI, being equivalent to a square hectometre. |
|
There are also a small number of restaurants mainly based in the town square. |
|
It takes three to five days to resand and refinish 1,000 to 1,200 square feet of flooring, he said. |
|
The fells connecting and subsidiary ridges occupy the corners of the square. |
|
The upper part of the fell, in excess of a mile square, is soft, peaty and drab. |
|
In front of the Rijksmuseum on the square itself is a long, rectangular pond. |
|
Before the two substances are mixed, they are separately cleaned of foreign matter and dried in a manner that creates large square cakes. |
|
A National Park was established in 1951 and, following a minor extension in 2016, now covers an area of approximately 2,362 square kilometres. |
|
Slumpy shoulders went square, back went ramrod straight, and she smiled at the other woman. |
|
The following table indicates reservoir emissions in milligrams per square meter per day for different bodies of water. |
|
Northumberland is the most sparsely populated county in England, with only 62 people per square kilometre. |
|
The central square at the Bull Ring has been redesigned with a water feature and the Ridings Shopping Centre refurbished. |
|
The ground floor windows have rounded heads and those on the floors above are square. |
|
Air masses cover many hundreds or thousands of square miles, and adapt to the characteristics of the surface below them. |
|
Just then a prisoner broke a gate chain with an iron bar and a number of the prisoners pressed through to the prison market square. |
|
|
The Duchy includes over 570 square kilometres of land, more than half of which lies in Devon. |
|
The Robertson-head screw has a square hole in the head, made in three different sizes, and must be driven with a special Robertson screwdriver. |
|
An incidental pleasure is his witty mastery of the scare quote and the square bracket. |
|
They conjectured that any semicontiguous minor can also be written in terms of domino tilings of a region on the square lattice. |
|
A semicubical parabola is a curve in which the ordinates are proportional to the square roots of the cubes of the abscissas. |
|
I took refuge in the square form and exhibited a picture which consisted of nothing more than a black square on a white field. |
|
You may not move a piece to a square already occupied by one of your own pieces. |
|
There are so many uses for the square, in fact, that a new model will usually come complete with a booklet enumerating its applications. |
|
You're not in Wisconsin, Dave. The big story isn't about a cow wandering into the town square. |
|
In each of the last three afternoon foursomes, the Americans were square through 15, but could only come in with two halves and a loss. |
|
We discovered that our first idea would never work, so we were back to square one. |
|
In England and France he was the square peg in the round hole, but here the holes were any sort of shape, and no sort of peg was quite amiss. |
|
The square root of 4 is 2. No negative square roots exist. Negative numbers have no square roots. |
|
The lower story of the market-house was open on all four of its sides to the public square. |
|
He was a stuggy little man, with very small eyes set rather slanting in his square face, and a jaw like a pike. |
|
They planted the cannon on the tumuli, sole elevations in this level country, and formed themselves into column and hollow square. |
|
Her classic robe is folded tunicwise over the bosom, her dense hair falls loosely on her shoulders and is cut square across the brow. |
|
Several sandstone abraders, pieces of a very abrasive red sandstone, that were ground square on one edge. |
|
They are square, neat boxes with wooden sides all round, and have unimpeachably satisfactory seats. |
|
The five projects are diversely located throughout Mali, and aggregately cover an impressive 1000 square kilometers. |
|
|
The reporter got some vox pops in the city square to see what people thought of the country's new flag. |
|
The country recognized their defence vulnerability after an airplane landed in front of the central square without any consequences. |
|
And a moment later a conoidal bullet struck him square in the chest and knocked him flat in the dirt among his comrades. |
|
The chair and table legs diminished as they neared the ground, and were straight and square in all their corners. |
|
I could see that Hemingway, confident that he would be dormy one, was a good deal shaken at coming to the eighteenth all square. |
|
We have horticultural science that can design seedless watermelons, fartless beans and square tomatoes. |
|
His nose starts squirting blood right before I kick him square in the twig and giggle berries. |
|
Vendors were selling sunglasses, bagged snacks, and sundry other items from handcarts in the square. |
|
With a density of 407 people per square kilometre, it would be the second most densely populated country in the European Union after Malta. |
|
The vendors were hawking their wares from little tables lining either side of the market square. |
|
I weant on for a gudish way till at last I loast sight o' the great square building behind the housen. |
|
It turns an almost square sectioned furrow and leaves a more broken surface finish. |
|
Shapes included square, rectangular, triangular and round, and the largest bricks found have measured over three feet in length. |
|
To reduce travel times, two diagonal streets crossed the square grid, passing through the central square. |
|
They would lay out the streets at right angles, in the form of a square grid. |
|
Each square marked off by four roads was called an insula, the Roman equivalent of a modern city block. |
|
The layout of the fortress also followed the standard for a legionary fortress with wooden buildings inside a square defensive boundary. |
|
The Virginia reel is among the square dances classified as the state dance. |
|
Sumatra is the second largest island in the East Indies and the fourth largest in the world covering 182,859 square miles. |
|
Wiping out half of Prussian territories from the map, Napoleon created a new kingdom of 1,100 square miles called Westphalia. |
|
|
It is at a perpendicular distance of 16 kadams from a point 69 kadams from the corner of the square. |
|
Meanwhile, a force under Sir Thomas Troubridge had fought their way to the main square but could go no further. |
|
The population density is 4,761 people per square kilometre, more than ten times that of any other British region. |
|
Mix four pounds magnesium sulfate with a bag of your favorite lawn food that covers 2,500 square feet. |
|
The force polices an area of approximately 1,554 square kilometres and is the 13th largest force in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. |
|
Everything had a modern look, and a large space in the centre was hardly less handsome than a London square. |
|
Alkmund's Church and its Georgian churchyard, the only Georgian square in Derby. |
|
His ideas about gravitation, and his claim of priority for the inverse square law, are outlined below. |
|
Hooke's statements up to 1674 made no mention, however, that an inverse square law applies or might apply to these attractions. |
|
The force is proportional to the product of the two masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distance between them. |
|
Newton, faced in May 1686 with Hooke's claim on the inverse square law, denied that Hooke was to be credited as author of the idea. |
|
This background shows there was basis for Newton to deny deriving the inverse square law from Hooke. |
|
Newton's role in relation to the inverse square law was not as it has sometimes been represented. |
|
Buildings vary widely in size, most were square or rectangular, though some round houses have been found. |
|
Into or onto the nucleus went a course of polygonal or square paving stones, called the summa crusta. |
|
Henry replaced the wooden palisade surrounding the upper ward with a stone wall interspersed with square towers and built the first King's Gate. |
|
Doorways are frequently enclosed within a square head over the arch mouldings, the spandrels being filled with quatrefoils or tracery. |
|
The cruciform churches often had deep chancels and a square crossing tower which has remained a feature of English ecclesiastical architecture. |
|
Where keeps did exist, they were no longer square but polygonal or cylindrical. |
|
The keep of these Crusader castles would have had a square plan and generally be undecorated. |
|
|
The Royal Palace was originally at Dattaraya square and was later moved to the Durbar square. |
|
Along with these palaces, the square surrounds quadrangles, revealing courtyards and temples. |
|
These panels may be square in shape, or sometimes triangular to accommodate arched or decorative bracing. |
|
Even the wealthy were persuaded to live in these in town, especially if provided with a square of garden in front of the house. |
|
Meanwhile, the New Guard is forming up and are awaiting inspection by the Adjutant on the parade square at Wellington Barracks. |
|
Following a public outcry, buildings around the square were protected in 1973, preventing redevelopment. |
|
London Transport Museum and the side entrance to the Royal Opera House box office and other facilities are also located on the square. |
|
The church of St Paul's was the first building, and was begun in July 1631 on the western side of the square. |
|
Another market, the Jubilee Market, is held in the Jubilee Hall on the south side of the square. |
|
The London Transport Museum is in a Victorian iron and glass building on the east side of the market square. |
|
It covers an area of 26 square km and is centred on the prehistoric monument of Stonehenge. |
|
The Great Court opened in December 2000 and is the largest covered square in Europe. |
|
A Christmas tree has been donated to the square by Norway since 1947 and is erected for twelve days before and after Christmas Day. |
|
The square contains a large central area with roadways on three sides and a terrace to the north, in front of the National Gallery. |
|
The roads around the square form part of the A4, a major road running west of the City of London. |
|
London Underground's Charing Cross tube station on the Northern and Bakerloo lines has an exit in the square. |
|
Building work on the south side of the square in the late 1950s revealed deposits from the last interglacial. |
|
Access between the square and the gallery had been by two crossings at the northeast and northwest corners. |
|
Barry's scheme provided two plinths for sculptures on the north side of the square. |
|
The square was once famous for feral pigeons and feeding them was a popular activity. |
|
|
Pigeons began flocking to the square before construction was completed and feed sellers became well known in the Victorian era. |
|
Supporters continued to feed the birds but in 2003 the mayor, Ken Livingstone, enacted bylaws to ban feeding them in the square. |
|
For many years, revellers celebrating the New Year have gathered in the square despite a lack of celebrations being arranged. |
|
The great Chartist rally in 1848, a campaign for social reform by the working class began in the square. |
|
In March 2011, the square was occupied by a crowd protesting against the UK Budget and proposed budget cuts. |
|
During the night the situation turned violent as the escalation by riot police and protesters damaged portions of the square. |
|
The Sea Cadets hold an annual celebration of the Battle of Trafalgar victory along the square. |
|
There is a life scale replica of the square in Bahria Town, Lahore, Pakistan where it is a tourist attraction and centre for local residents. |
|
Zappas sponsored the first Olympic Games in 1859, which was held in an Athens city square. |
|
The American point was won by Bill Mehlhorn with Emmet French being all square. |
|
Traditional sailing vessels with boomless or square sails are not put at risk by jibing. |
|
The jacks of ships flying variants of the Blue Ensign are square and have a square Union Flag in the canton. |
|
The protected area would be 234,291 square kilometers, half of which would be closed to fishing. |
|
The hardest part of the negotiations was reported to be Poland's insistence on square root voting in the Council of Ministers. |
|
In 1991, she and her husband Denis moved to a house in Chester Square, a residential garden square in central London's Belgravia district. |
|
Compared with the rest of Europe, Scotland has a low population density at 65 people per square kilometre. |
|
They mounted a single square sail on a yard, with an additional spar along the bottom of the sail. |
|
He also built the Greyhound public house which still stands in Cromford market square. |
|
The projects were limited to 10 square kilometres in size and with a maximum of 30 turbines. |
|
In Glasgow, Walter Scott's Monument dominates the centre of George Square, the main public square in the city. |
|
|
As the walk continues, we might glimpse the town square down different streets, sometime a long way off, other times quite close. |
|
We may never return to the square in the rest of the walk or we may visit a new part of it that was not explored initially. |
|
Following the aquatic theme, Whiteread's Monument evokes the scene of the 1805 naval battle for which the square is named. |
|
The blade emerges from the water square and feathers immediately once clear of the water. |
|
However, Australia's EEZ from its Antarctic Territory is approximately 2 million square kilometres. |
|
The United Kingdom's exclusive economic zone is the fifth largest in the world at 6,805,586 square km. |
|
Various square lookout towers that characterize the most famous images of the wall have disappeared. |
|
Given the size of the territory, the force amounted to less than one soldier per square mile. |
|
Population density is of 15 persons per square kilometer of land area, well below the world average of 50 persons. |
|
These buildings are all situated at Burghausen's grand central square Stadtplatz. |
|
Finland has an average population density of 18 inhabitants per square kilometre. |
|
The village hall sits opposite the main village square and is an especially eclectic piece of 1920s design. |
|
Thomson contended that the signalling speed through a given cable was inversely proportional to the square of the length of the cable. |
|
In the Kronotsky Nature Reserve there are estimated to be three to four bears per 100 square kilometres. |
|
The Eurasian beaver has a triangular nasal opening, unlike those of the North American beavers, which are square. |
|
Sikh architecture is characterised by gilded fluted domes, cupolas, kiosks, stone lanterns, ornate balusters and square roofs. |
|
The Breton subsoil is characterised by a huge amount of fractures that form a large aquifer containing several millions square meters of water. |
|
The tall square tower, part of the church, was built to hold the relics of St Andrew and became known as the first cathedral in the town. |
|
The thrower, now in the hack, lines the body up with shoulders square to the skip's broom at the far end for line. |
|
The top of the square column was adorned with imitative cannons on each side. |
|
|
The neutron flux involved may be on the order of 1022 neutrons per square centimeter per second. |
|
In the 1990s, a statue of a shepherd and sheep was installed in the market square as a memorial to the history of the market site. |
|
However the first water pumping station here was set up in 1600 by John Tyrer who pumped water to a square tower built on the city's Bridgegate. |
|
Castle Square, commonly referred to as the 'Maes' by both Welsh and English speakers, is the market square of the town. |
|
However, since its revamp the square has caused controversy due to traffic and parking difficulties. |
|
Sea otters have about 26,000 to 165,000 hairs per square centimeters of skin, a rich fur for which humans hunted them almost to extinction. |
|
There were navigation schools in the town and many of the last square riggers that sailed the world were captained by New Quay men. |
|
A place glimpsed as square fragments from the windows of a Saab 340 as it bucked in on a pesky nor'wester. |
|
The view of The Myddleton on the square is, in fact, the rear of the building. |
|
These mosques have square or rectangular plans with an enclosed courtyard and covered prayer hall. |
|
The most unusual characteristic of this structure is that it is of square plan, rather than circular or octagonal. |
|
The figures are taken from western square dancing, rather than from traditional southern Appalachian dancing. |
|
Irish troops made a stand in the market square, but they were quickly overwhelmed. |
|
Although the shape of the cell is typically circular, some cells may be triangular, square, or elliptical. |
|
They may extend over hundreds of thousands of square kilometers of the Earth's surface. |
|
He was a stout, squat figure, with a square face and broad black eyebrows, that announced him to be opinionative and disputatious. |
|
At its most extensive it consists of eggs, square sausage, fried dumpling, potato scone, tomato, mushrooms, bacon beef links and fried bread. |
|
The above formula states that wave power is proportional to the wave energy period and to the square of the wave height. |
|
The part of the city built starting in 1624 is now often called Kvadraturen because of its orthogonal layout in regular, square blocks. |
|
It covers millions of square miles in the polar regions, varying with the seasons. |
|
|
Entirely new landscapes covering millions of square kilometers were formed in a relatively short period of geologic time. |
|
Note that in both formulas the wave speed is proportional to the square root of the wavelength. |
|
At the end of March 2004, there were 215 national nature reserves in England with a total area of 879 square kilometres. |
|
At 31 March 2008 there were 65 Scottish national nature reserves with a total area of approximately 1330 square kilometres. |
|
Distinguishing features of this earless seal include square fore flippers and thick bristles on its muzzle. |
|
The mast was now square in section and located toward the middle of the ship, and could be lowered and raised. |
|
Even though no longship sail has been found, accounts and depictions verify that longships had square sails. |
|
According to this plan, the first artificial island will have an area of 6 square kilometers. |
|
The Khalifa found himself in a high-ceiled hall, ornamented with a perfection of taste, in the middle of which there was a square throne of ivory and gold upon gold feet. |
|
The circumradius of the unit square is one-half the square root of two. |
|
There was a striking black coatdress with square gold paillettes streaking down the sides, and a lovely black sleeveless dress with silvery panels. |
|
It has short sleeves ending in a square form in the lower part. |
|
From the centre of each side of this tree-bound square ran avenues east, west, and south into the wide expanse of corn-land and coomb to the distance of a mile or so. |
|
Inside a walled square, 500 meters to a side, was the ceremonial center. |
|
He'd always been aboveboard, a square shooter from start to finish. |
|
The T square, used by architects, makes very good parallels, if made to slide along the smooth edge of a drawing board, or a straightedge laid and kept steady on the paper. |
|
The building, towering over its surroundings with its square concrete frame and reflective walls of gold-tinted glass, was an eyesore visible throughout the city. |
|
The Turbine Hall, which once housed the electricity generators of the old power station, is five storeys tall with 3,400 square metres of floorspace. |
|
In the case of the Gordon Sette, the flews are not pendulous. The lip line from the nose to the flews shows a sharp, well-defined, square contour. |
|
Classical period Cholula most likely covered around 5 square kilometers, and had an estimated population of fifteen to twenty thousand individuals. |
|
|
The Concertgebouw is situated across this street from the square. |
|
The square root of a positive integer is an irrational number unless the positive integer is a perfect square, in which case the square root will also be a positive integer. |
|
For decades now the 38,000 square miles aboriginal reserve has been sacrosanct from white intrusion. Gin burglars who sneak in looking for lubras are prosecuted. |
|
I had a small square of silk, but it wasn't enough to make what I wanted. |
|
In April 2009, the United Nations Commission for the Limits of the Continental Shelf approved Norway's claim to an additional 235,000 square kilometres of continental shelf. |
|
The statue long stood an adjacent square to Peru's Government Palace. |
|
John and Susie went to the square dance and did the hoedown. |
|
The old parade square has recently been converted for housing. |
|
Yield is usually expressed as kilograms per square kilometre per year. |
|
This is, however, equivalent to 6 million millimetres square. |
|
Wrought iron square bars, called cross binders, are run through the roof of the furnace and bolted to the cast iron plates to keep the roof from collapsing. |
|
Upon entering the square the leading Incans in attendance on Atahualpa divided their ranks to enable his litter to be carried to the centre, where all stopped. |
|
Carrying a cross and a missal the friar passed through the rows of attendants who had spread out to allow the Inca's litter to reach the centre of the square. |
|
It has an attractive square and the oldest parish church in Cusco, built in 1563, which has a carved wooden pulpit considered the epitome of Colonial era woodwork in Cusco. |
|
The population of Cebu Province in 2015 was 2,938,982 people, with a density of 590 inhabitants per square kilometre or 1,500 inhabitants per square mile. |
|
At its height under Trajan, it covered 5 million square kilometres. |
|
Not the worst of the three but jumps twelve foot and a half by the square. |
|
Peninsulas can be found on coastlines and in smaller bodies of water throughout the world, ranging in scale from square meters to millions of square kilometers. |
|
In addition to Penwith's status as a Heritage coastline, west Penwith, an area of 90 square kilometres, is considered an Environmentally Sensitive Area. |
|
It has a population density of about three people per square kilometre. |
|