Rolling Sentence Examples

rolling
  • He started rolling his shirtsleeves up.

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  • He saw them rolling down her cheeks.

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  • She removed his Tux and shoes, rolling him around the bed in the process.

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  • Katie said, rolling her eyes.

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  • Not many small towns so I'll keep rolling and not tarry here.

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  • Ginger, coiffed and styled by the best, looked ready for a fashion photographer's lens while continually rolling her eyes with disdain toward her sister-in-law.

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  • His sudden leap to the side unseated her, sending her out of the saddle and rolling off the trail.

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  • On peering out all they could see was rolling banks of clouds, so thick that they obscured all else.

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  • Once this ball gets rolling, it will speed up and, because of it, we will all wake up each morning with a little extra spring in our step and sparkle in our eye.

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  • One second she was falling head over heels, the next rolling on her side.

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  • He picked the ring up and stared at it absently, rolling it back and forth between his thumb and index finger.

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  • He leaned forward as he helped her dismount at the barn, rain rolling off the brim of his hat in a stream.

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  • We were rolling in euphoria when an old friend from my Amherst, Massachusetts childhood telephoned with an invitation to visit her family cabin in New Hampshire.

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  • Damian knew if they had video chat, he'd see Jule rolling his eyes.

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  • She was surprised to see him with Lori, rolling in the hay - and there was no question about what was going on this time.

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  • He had already stopped for lunch and was rolling toward mile 47 when a sudden thought from nowhere hit him between the eyes.

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  • Rissa blocked the blow of the second and dropped, rolling as an axe split the ground near her head.

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  • And so the seasons went rolling on into summer, as one rambles into higher and higher grass.

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  • Bordeaux dismounted, surveying the camp, landscape and men in one rolling glance.

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  • The trip took us out of the District on the Maryland side as we headed west through picturesque rolling hills and farm lands.

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  • He tasted blood and spit it out, rolling onto his back with a belly laugh.

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  • He didn't drink long, and she was too afraid of moving to wipe away the tears rolling down her face.

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  • Rolling up her pants legs, she waded across the creek.

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  • The way I heard it, Grandma & Grandpa Barret were rolling in money and Dad wasn't up to their standards... financially.

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  • Its cool year-round creek and rolling hills dotted with wild flowers filled her dreams at night – beckoned.

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  • Fritz was slumped on the back of his mule, half-asleep, his stocky frame rolling with the gait of the mule.

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  • It was on these byways that Dean opted to travel, rolling along the river with the down of cottonwoods filling the air like a winter snowstorm, past the occasional farm house, fields, and ever-present vista of mountains wrapping around him.

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  • She took her time before answering, as if rolling the question around in her mind.

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  • The weather remained ominous with dark clouds rolling in, pushed by an ever-increasing wind that churned the sky in threatening waves.

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  • As he started to leave, he turned to the frail woman who was rolling a piece of paper into her typewriter.

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  • Then his front wheel twisted violently and he knew the tire had blown a second before he hit the sand at the shoulder and felt himself twisting and rolling in the grass and sharp rocks at the edge of the roadside.

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  • Of course the pros had someone shove a new bike under them before they stopped rolling.

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  • The Healer reached down, rolling up the leg of her jeans to reveal a small sheathe with a knife.

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  • The city is built on rolling ground about 900 ft.

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  • Rolling into Sheet.

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  • You cannot see the waves rolling up the beach or hear their roar.

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  • He walked through the living room and down the hall silently rolling up his sleeves.

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  • Mustering his strength, he leapt, tearing the woman out of the attacker's grip and rolling several feet with her.

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  • The first rolling mill west of the Alleghanies was probably one near Morgantown.

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  • Under it the cost of the necessary land was to be found as to one-third by the state and as to the residue locally, but this arrangement proved unworkable and was abandoned in 1845, when it was settled that the state should provide the land and construct the earthworks and stations, the various companies which obtained concessions being left to make the permanent way, provide rolling stock and work the lines for certain periods.

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  • In this sea were laid down the shales of the Rolling Downs formation.

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  • The Cretaceous sea gradually receded and the plains of the Rolling Downs formation formed on its floor were covered by the sub-aerial and lacustrine deposits of the Desert Sandstone.

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  • The clays of the Rolling Downs formation overlie a series of sands and drifts, saturated with water under high pressure, which discharges at the surface as a flowing well, when a borehole pierces the impermeable cover.

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  • As the plains on the Rolling Downs formation are mostly waterless, the discovery of this deep reservoir of water has been of great aid in the development of central Australia.

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  • The well-water was supposed to have percolated underground, through the Blythesdale Braystone, which outcrops in patches on the eastern edge of the Rolling Downs formation.

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  • Among the industrial establishments of the city are stove and range factories, flour mills, rolling mills, distilleries, breweries, shoe factories, copper refining works, nail and tack factories, glass works and agricultural implement factories.

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  • The country is rolling and hilly, the Blue Hills (with the exception of a part included in Braintree in 1712 and now in Quincy) lying in Milton.

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  • The state, in taking over the Failways, did not exercise sufficient care to see that the lines and the rolling stock were kept up to a proper state of efficiency and adequacy for the work they had t,o perform; while the step itself was taken somewhat hastily.

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  • The state incurred in this connection a liability of some 1/22o,ooo,000, of which about 1/2I6,00o,000 represented the rolling stock.

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  • The capital value of the whole of the lines, rolling stock, &c., for 1 9081909 was calculated approximately at 1/2244,f 61,400, and the profits at 1/25,295,019, or 22%.

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  • The insufficiency of rolling stock, and especially of goods wagons, is mainly caused by delays in handling traffic consequent on this or other causes, among which may be mentioned the great length ofthe single lines south of Rome.

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  • The sea-worn amber has lost its crust, but has often acquired a dull rough surface by rolling in sand.

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  • Such broken material rolling down a uniform scarp would tend to reduce its steepness by the loss of material in the upper part and by the accumulation of a mound or scree against the loti ii er part of the slope.

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  • They consist of two rows of balls rolling in two pairs of V races or grooves.

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  • The female beetle in spring-time collects dung, which she forms into a ball by continuous rolling, sometimes assisted by a companion.

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  • By making them in longer lengths a reduction was effected in the number of joints - always the weakest part of the line; and another advance consisted in the substitution of wrought iron for cast iron, though that material did not gain wide adoption until after the patent for an improved method of rolling rails granted in 1820 to John Birkinshaw, of the Bedlington Ironworks, Durham.

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  • The roadway, tracks and rolling stock are so well maintained that those causes which lead to the worst derailments have been eliminated almost completely, and the record of serious collisions has been reduced nearly to zero by the universal use of the block system and by systematic precautions at junctions.

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  • The rail-failures mentioned above also drew renewed attention to the importance of the thermal treatment of the steel from the time of melting to the last passage through the rolling mill and to the necessity of the finishing temperature being sufficiently low if the product is to be fine grained, homogeneous and tough; and to permit of this requirement being met there was a tendency to increase the thickness of the metal in the web and flanges of the rails.

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  • The resistance to motion round a curve has not been so systematically studied that any definite rule can be formulated applicable to all classes of rolling stock and all radii of curves.

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  • Cars built almost entirely of steel, in which the proportion of wood is reduced to a minimum, are used on some electric railways, in order to diminish danger from fire, and the same mode of construction is also being adopted for the rolling stock of steam railways.

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  • This minimum was at first fixed at 50%, but on and after the 1st of August 1906 it was raised to 75%, with the result that soon after that date practically all the rolling stock of American railways, whether passenger or freight, was provided with compressed air brakes.

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  • Their primary object being the development and peopling of the land, they have naturally been made as cheaply as possible; and as in such cases the cost of the land is inconsiderable, economy has been sought by the use of lighter and rougher permanent way, plant, rolling stock, &c. Such railways are not " light " in the technical sense of having been made under enactments intended to secure permanent lowness of cost as compared with standard lines.

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  • Light locomotives, light rails and light rolling stock are employed.

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  • The advantage of uniformity of gauge is in the use of trucks for goods which belong to the rolling stock of the main lines.

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  • The chief difference between the first three types lies in the weight of rails and rolling stock and in the radius of the curves.

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  • The rolling stock is constructed either for farm produce or heavy minerals, the latter holding io to 27 cub.

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  • East of the belt are level or gently rolling prairies, and along the Gulf Coast is a low, marshy tract.

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  • Ashland has large saw-mills, iron and steel rolling mills, foundries and machine shops, railway repair shops (of the Chicago & NorthWestern railway), knitting works, and manufactories of dynamite, sulphite fibre, charcoal and wood-alcohol.

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  • With such subterranean pests little can be done beyond rolling the land to keep it firm, and thus preventing them from moving rapidly from plant to plant.

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  • The state occupies an elevated plateau, extending from two spurs of the Sierra Madre, called the Sierra Fria and Sierra de Laurel, eastward to the rolling fertile plains of its eastern and south-eastern districts.

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  • The Haud (only the northern part of which is British territory - the rest is Abyssinian) consists partly of thorn jungle, the haud of the Somali, partly of rolling grass plains, called ban, and partly of semi-desert country called aror.

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  • Camaguey is characterized by rolling, open plains, slightly broken, especially in the W., by low mountains.

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  • The line, stations, sheds and stores are all solidly built, and the rolling stock is sufficient and of the best quality.

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  • The rather level surface of the " worn down mountains " of the north of the state and the coastal plain beds of the southern and western parts are now dissected by rivers, which make most of the state a rolling or hilly country, without strong relief.

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  • In the southern and central portions of the state open rolling prairies interspersed with groves and belts of oak and other deciduous hard-wood timber predominate.

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  • The first European visitors to the territory now embraced in the state of Minnesota found it divided between two powerful Indian tribes, the Ojibways or Chippewas, who occupied the heavily wooded northern portion and the region along the Mississippi river, and the Sioux or Dakotas, who made their homes on the more open rolling country in the south and west and in the valley of the Minnesota.

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  • The surface is generally gently rolling, and in places along the banks of the Winooski or Onion river, the shore of the lake, and in the valleys, it is very picturesque.

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  • When it is mechanically hardened by hammering, rolling or wire-drawing its permeability may be greatly diminished, especially under a moderate magnetizing force.

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  • Parts of this coastal plain, however, have an elevation of 100 to 200 ft., are rolling and fertile in character, and terminate on the coast in a line of bluffs.

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  • In Rio Grande do Sul, where two large lakes have been created by uplifted sand beaches, the coastal plain widens greatly, and is merged in an extensive open, rolling grassy plain, traversed by ridges of low hills (cuchillas), similar to the neighbouring republic of Uruguay.

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  • Among Bristol's manufacturing establishments are machine shops, rolling mills, a planing mill, yarn, hosiery and worsted mills, and factories for making carpets, wall paper and patent leather.

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  • In addition to the industries connected with the shipping, large numbers of hands are employed in the government railway works, where the locomotives and rolling stock used by the state railways are manufactured.

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  • Selling his Baltimore works, he built, in 1836, in partnership with his brother Thomas, a rolling mill in New York; in 1845 he removed it to Trenton, New Jersey, where iron structural beams were first made in 1854 and the Bessemer process first tried in America in 1856; and at Philippsburg, New Jersey, he built the largest blast furnace in the country at that time.

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  • Below the hills the country is high and arid, generally level, but sometimes rolling in sandy undulations, and much intersected by hill torrents, 201 in number.

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  • Across the arms he balances the iron rod to which the glass bulb adheres, and rolling it backwards and forwards with the fingers of his left hand fashions the glass between the blades of his sugar-tongs tool, grasped in his right hand.

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  • The surface of vessels may be spangled with gold or platinum by rolling the hot glass on metallic leaf, or iridescent, by the deposition of metallic tin, or by the corrosion caused by the chemical action of acid fumes.

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  • In most modern works the greater part of these operations, as well as the actual rolling of the glass, is carried out by mechanical means, steam power and subsequently electrical power having been successfully applied to this purpose; the handling of the great weights of glass required for the largest sheets of plate-glass which are produced at the present time would, indeed, be impossible without the aid of machinery.

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  • Since the surfaces produced by rolling have subsequently to be ground and polished, it is essential that the glass should leave the rolling-table with as smooth a surface as possible, so that great care is required in this part of the process.

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  • The more elaborate patterns found on what is known as " figure rolled plate " are produced in a somewhat different manner; the glass used for this purpose is considerably whiter in colour and much softer than ordinary rolled plate, and instead of being rolled out on a table it is produced by rolling between two moving rollers from which the sheet issues.

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  • Imitations of natural stones were made by stirring together in a crucible glasses of different colours, or by incorporating fragments of differently coloured glasses into a mass of molten glass by rolling.

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  • De Nehou's process of rolling molten glass poured on an iron table rendered the manufacture of very large plates possible.

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  • It has in general one value for the powdery metal as obtained by reduction of the oxide in hydrogen below the melting point of the metal, another for the metal in the state which it assumes spontaneously on freezing, and this latter value, in general, is modified by hammering, rolling, drawing, &c. These mechanical operations do not necessarily add to the density; stamping, it is true, does so necessarily, but rolling or drawing occasionally causes a diminution of the density.

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  • Its hardware industries are important, and embrace iron rolling, the manufacture of fine wire, needles, springs and silver ornaments.

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  • Rolling the land is beneficial to young crops.

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  • A redistilled zinc, from an ordinarily pure commercial zinc, is often called chemically pure, but redistillation is seldom practised except for the recovery of zinc from galvanizer's dross and from the skimmings and bottoms of the melting furnaces of zinc rolling mills.

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  • The specific gravity of zinc cannot be expected to be perfectly constant; according to Karsten, that of pure ingot is 6.915, and rises to 7.191 after rolling.

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  • In the wheeled plough some of the weight and downward pull due to its action on the ground is taken by the wheels; the sliding friction is thus to some extent converted into a rolling friction, and the draught is correspondingly diminished.

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  • Dawasir; the whole of this hilly region of eastern Nejd is, perhaps, rather a rolling down country than truly mountainous, in which high pastures alternate with deep fertile valleys, supporting numerous villages with a large agricultural population.

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  • The region of which Rhode Island is a part was at one time worn down to a gently rolling plain near sealevel, but has since been uplifted and somewhat dissected by stream action.

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  • In 1777 the state offered a large premium for every pound of steel, similar to German steel, made within its boundaries; and in 1789 a rolling and slitting mill was built near Providence.

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  • It lies on a rolling prairie at an elevation of 975 ft.

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  • It is impossible, whilst watching the rolling, seething volume of flood-water which swirls westwards in April, to imagine the waste stretches of dry river-bed which in a few months' time (when every available drop of water is carried off for irrigation) will represent the Hari Rud.

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  • The principal industry was the manufacture of iron and steel products, which, including steel and rolling mills, car, foundry and machine shops, and shipyards, represented more than 30% of the total capital, and approximately 25% of the total gross product of the manufactures in the state.

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  • Direct observations of currents in the open sea are difficult, and even when the ship is anchored the veering and rolling of the vessel produce disturbances that greatly affect the result.

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  • The city is situated on the border of a rolling prairie about 770 ft.

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  • For the most part the surface is that of a prairie tableland, moderately rolling, and with a general but scarcely perceptible slope, which in the eastern two-thirds is from N.W.

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  • To the south lies a rolling plateau of basaltic formation (with the sacred town of Multai, and the springs of the river Tapti at its highest point), extending over the whole of the southern face of the district, and finally merging into the wild and broken line of the Ghats, which lead down to the plains.

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  • It may be regarded as an epicycloid in which the rolling and fixed circles are equal in diameter, as the inverse of a parabola for its focus, or as the caustic produced by the reflection at a spherical surface of rays emanating from a point on the circumference.

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  • It is a rolling highland dominated by long, wooded hill-ridges, remarkably even-topped in general elevation, intersected and broken by deep valleys.

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  • A little farther away are the woollen mills of San Ildefonso, the paper-mills of San Rafael, and important works for the manufacture of railway rolling stock.

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  • Pieces are cut out for assay, and the bars are then ready for rolling.

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  • In some mints the fillets are annealed frequently, the fillets for one-mark pieces at the Berlin mint, for example, being annealed four times in the course of rolling.

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  • In the Royal Mint silver bars are annealed once during rolling by passing through a Bates & Peard gas furnace.

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  • The blanks are then passed to an edge rolling machine, by which they are thickened at the edge so as to form a rim to protect the finished coin from wear.

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  • The process will probably be abandoned as soon as the tarnishing of the metal during rolling and annealing can be avoided.

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  • After-cultivation may comprise rolling, harrowing (to preserve the fineness of the tilth) and in some districts hoeing.

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  • The franchise, roadway, roadbed, rails and rolling stock of railways in more than one county are assessed at their full value by the state board of equalization.

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  • The outer ends of the shore cantilevers are loaded to balance half the weight of the central girder, the rolling load, and 200 tons in addition.

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  • This is due to the half weight of centre girder, the weight of the cantilever itself, the rolling load on half the bridge, and the wind pressure.

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  • Rolling load taken at I.

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  • The methods of erection may be classed as - (I) erection on staging or falsework; (2) floating to the site and raising; (3) rolling out from one abutment; (4) building out member by member, the completed part forming the stage from which additions are handled.

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  • In such rolling operations the girder is subjected to straining actions different from those which it is intended to resist, and parts intended for tension may be in compression; hence it may need to be stiffened by timber during rolling.

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  • But very great accuracy in drawing this curve is unnecessary, because the rolling stock of railways varies so much that the precise magnitude and distribution of the loads which will pass over a bridge cannot be known.

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  • All that can be done is to assume a set of loads likely to produce somewhat severer straining than any probable actual rolling loads.

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  • With the exception of the Black Hills district in the south-west, the state is a wide rolling plain, with its eastern portion a part of the Prairie Plains region, and its western portion a part of the Great Plains.

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  • Helena is delightfully situated with Mt Helena as a background in the hollow of the Prickly Pear valley, a rich agricultural region surrounded by rolling hills and lofty mountains, and contains many fine buildings, including the state capitol, county court house, the Montana club house, high school, the cathedral of St Helena, a federal building, and the United States assay office.

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  • The prairies in this second table-land are gently rolling, and are covered with drift from the continental ice-sheet of the glacial period.

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  • The Federal leader intended to hold back his centre whilst these two forces were rolling up Lee's wings.

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  • The value of its factory products in 1905 was $ 1 7, 1 4 6, 33 8 (1 4.3% more than in 1900), the more important being those of steel works and rolling mills ($4,528,907), blast furnaces, steam railway repair shops, cigar and cigarette factories ($1,258,498), foundries and machine shops ($953,617), boot and shoe factories ($922,568), flouring and grist mills, slaughtering and meat-packing establishments and silk mills.

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  • In general it has a broad rolling surface.

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  • To the eastward it abounds in mountains and valleys; to the westward it is a rolling plateau.

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  • In the extreme west part of the state these mountains merge, as it were, into a rolling plateau, the Appalachian Plateau, having an average elevation of 2500 ft.

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  • On the East Shore to the north is a marly loam overlying a yellowish-red clay sub-soil, to the south is a soil quite stiff with light coloured clay, while here and there, especially in the middle and south, are considerable areas both of light sandy soils and tidal marsh loams. On the West Shore the soils range from a light sandy loam in the lower levels south from Baltimore to rather heavy loarns overlying a yellowish clay on the rolling uplands and on the terraces along the Potomac and Patuxent.

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  • The village is built on rolling ground rising about 70 ft.

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  • Reinach (Revue archeologique, 1904) finds the origin of the story in a picture, in which Sisyphus was represented rolling a huge stone up Acrocorinthus, symbolical of the labour and skill involved in the building of the Sisypheum.

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  • When a distinction was made between the souls in the under world, Sisyphus was supposed to be rolling up the stone perpetually as a punishment for some offence committed on earth; and various reasons were invented to account for it.

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  • The labour of rolling the metal by hand was done away with about 1760, by the firm of Tudor, Leader & Sherburn, who first employed horse-power, and for more than half a century the trade both in Sheffield and Birmingham continued to flourish.

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  • Scranton better grades of iron ore and of limestone were procured, and within a decade a rolling mill, a nail factory and a manufactory of steel rails were established, and adequate facilities for railway transportation were provided.

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  • This board, which is composed of five members appointed by the supreme court for a term of two years, also assesses the taxes on the railways, and on telegraph and telephone lines; for railways the average rate of taxation is assessed on the estimated actual value of the road beds, rolling stock and equipment, and for the telegraph and telephone lines this rate is assessed on the estimated actual value of the poles, wires, instruments, apparatus, office furniture and fixtures.

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  • Like the woodlice they were capable of rolling themselves up into a ball, many specimens having been found fossilized in this state, with the pygidium pressed tightly against the head-shield.

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  • Although composed chiefly of crystalline rocks, which are commonly associated with a rugged landscape, and although possessing a greatly deformed structure, which must at some ancient period have been associated with strong relief, the upland as a whole is gently rolling, and the inter-stream surfaces are prevailing plateau-like in their evenness, with altitudes of 1400 to 1600 ft.

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  • Under the older-fashioned methods of treating physical geography, the prairies were empirically described as level prairies, rolling prairies, and so on.

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  • The weir is opened by removing the sliding panels or rolling Scale 'kW.

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  • The very flat and rich prairie near Winnipeg is the former bed of the glacial Lake Agassiz; but most of the prairie to the west is of a gently rolling character and there are two rather abrupt breaks in the plain, the most westerly one receiving the name of the Missouri Coteau.

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  • Similar wide tracts of less broken country occur, after a mountainous interruption, in northern British Columbia and to some extent in the Yukon Territory, where wide valleys and rolling hills alternate with short mountain ranges of no great altitude.

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  • All parts of the Dominion are well adapted for sheep; but various causes, amongst which must be reckoned the prosperity of other branches of agriculture, including wheat-growing and dairying, have in several of the provinces contributed to prevent that attention to this branch which its importance deserves, though there are large areas of rolling, rugged yet nutritious pastures well suited to sheep-farming.

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  • South of these highlands, occupying a narrow strip on each side of the Tennessee river, is a delightful country of gentle rolling lowlands varying in elevation from 500 to 800 ft.

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  • Huntington has extensive railway car and repair shops, besides foundries and machine shops, steel rolling mills, manufactories of stoves and ranges, breweries and glass works.

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  • In the ripe fruit the carpels separate into five one-seeded portions (cocci), which break away from the central column, either rolling elastically outwards and upwards or becoming spirally twisted.

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  • But in Germany, as also in France, the waves of anti-Infallibility were rolling so high, that the further development of events was viewed with no small concern.

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  • In spring the grass on the rolling plains is soon parched.

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  • The north-west part of it is a slate belt that has been much dissected by eroding streams, but the south-east part is a gently rolling belt of limestone to which occasionally a steep hill descends from the slate belt.

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  • Among the products are packed meats, flour, beer, trunks, crackers, candy, paint, ice, paste, cigars, clothing, shoes, mattresses, woven wire beds, furniture and overalls; and there are foundries, iron rolling mills and tanneries.

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  • The richest portion of the vilayet lies east of the capital in the rolling plains watered by tributaries of the Tigris.

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  • This condition is one marked by unsteadiness - a sort of flickering rolling - of the eyeballs, and it becomes more marked as they endeavour to adjust their accommodation to near objects.

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  • When quite pure it is somewhat harder than tin, and its hardness is considerably increased by rolling.

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  • The rapid advance in mechanical engineering in the latter part of this second period stimulated the iron industry greatly, giving it in 1728 Payn and Hanbury's rolling mill for rolling sheet iron, in 1760 John Smeaton's cylindrical cast-iron bellows in place of the wooden and leather ones previously used, in 1783 Cort's grooved rolls for rolling bars and rods of iron, and in 1838 James Nasmyth's steam hammer.

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  • Hence steel which has been heated very highly, whether for welding, or for greatly softening it so that it can be rolled to the desired shape with but little expenditure of power, ought later to be refined, either by reheating it from below Are to slightly above Ac 3 or by rolling it after it has cooled to a relatively low temperature, i.e.

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  • The shaping processes include the mechanical ones, such as rolling, forging and wire-drawing, and the remelting ones such as the crucible process of melting wrought iron or steel in crucibles and casting it in ingots for the manufacture of the best kinds of tool steel.

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  • Of this power about half would be used at the blastfurnaces themselves, leaving 750,000 horsepower available for driving the machinery of the rolling mills, &c. This use of the gas engine is likely to have far - reaching results.

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  • In order to utilize this power, the converting mill, in which the pig iron is converted into steel, and the rolling mills must adjoin t h e blast - furnace.

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  • But, roll and re-roll as often as we like, much cinder remains imbedded in the iron, in the form of threads and rods drawn out in the direction of rolling, and of course weakening the metal in the transverse direction.

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  • To bring them to a temperature suitable for rolling, these ingots must be set in heating or soaking furnaces (§ 125), and this should be done as soon as possible after they are cast, both to lessen the loss of their initial heat, and to make way for the next succeeding lot of ingots, a matter of great importance, because the charges of steel follow each other at such very brief intervals.

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  • Yet the use of an open-hearth furnace of very great capacity, say of 200 tons per charge, has the disadvantage that such very large lots of steel, delivered at relatively long intervals, are less readily managed in the subsequent operations of soaking and rolling down to the final shape, than smaller lots delivered at shorter intervals.

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  • But deepseated blowholes like those at B are relatively harmless in lowcarbon easily welding steel, because the subsequent operation of forging or rolling usually obliterates them by welding their sides firmly together.

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  • The second is by casting it into a large rough block called an " ingot," and rolling or hammering this out into the desired shape.

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  • Though the former certainly seems the simpler way, yet its technical difficulties are so great that it is in fact much the more expensive, and therefore it is in general used only in making objects of a shape hard to give by forging or rolling.

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  • Heating Furnaces are used in iron manufacture chiefly for bringing masses of steel or wrought iron to a temperature proper for rolling or forging.

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  • In order to economize power in these operations, the metal should in general be as soft and hence as hot as is consistent with its reachingalow temperature before the rolling or forging is finished, because, as explained in § 32, undisturbed cooling from a high temperature injures the metal.

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  • Bringing such an ingot, then, to the rolling temperature is not really an operation of heating, because its average temperature is already above the rolling temperature, but one of equalizing the temperature, by allowing the internal excess of heat to " soak " through the mass.

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  • To heat these on the intermittent plan for further rolling, i.e.

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  • As the foremost end of the billet emerges from the furnace it enters the first of a series of roll-trains, and passes immediately thence to others, so that before half of the billet has emerged from the furnace its front end has already been reduced by rolling to its final shape, that of merchant-bars, which are relatively thin, round or square rods, in lengths of 300 ft.

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  • The rolling mill in its simplest form is a pair of cylindrical rollers,.

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  • The skin of the object, D, which is undergoing rolling, technically called " the piece," is drawn forward powerfully by the friction of the revolving.

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  • For much the same reason rolling proceeds much faster than drawing, and on both these accounts it is incomparably the cheaper of the two.

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  • Thus it comes about that rolling is so very much cheaper than either forging or drawing that these latter processes are used only when rolling is impracticable.

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  • Great armour plates can indeed be made by rolling, because in making such flat plates the ingot is simply rolled back and forth between a pair of plain cylindrical rolls, like BB of fig.

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  • Finally the quantity of armour plate needed is so enormous that it justifies the expense of installing a great rolling mill.

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  • Pieces of very small cross section, like wire, are more conveniently made by drawing through a die than by rolling, essentially because a single draft reduces the cross section of a wire much more than a single pass between rolls can.

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  • Pieces which vary materially in cross section from point to point in their length cannot well be made by rolling, because the cross section of the piece as it emerges from the rolls is necessarily that of the aperture between the rolls from which it is emerging, and this aperture is naturally of constant size because the rolls are cylindrical.

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  • The fact that rolling is so much cheaper than forging has led engineers to design their pieces so that they can be made by rolling, i.e.

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  • There are, in the town or its neighbourhood, great engineering, gun-making, and rolling and polishing works and breweries.

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  • They are then spread out thinly on trays or racks made of bamboo, canvas or wire netting, under cover, for some 18 or 30 hours (according to the temporary weather conditions) to wither, after which they are in a soft, flaccid condition ready for rolling.

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  • The object of rolling is to crush the leaves and to break their cells so as to liberate the juices.

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  • Covering the higher parts of the south-western Palaeozoic area in most places are rolling hills of boulder clay or stony moraines; while the lower levels are plains gently sloping toward the nearest of the Great Lakes and sheeted with silt deposited in more ancient lakes when the St Lawrence outlet was blocked with ice at the end of the glacial period.

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  • At the south-eastern end St Mary's river carries its waters to Lake Huron, with a fall of 602 to 581 ft., most of which takes place at Sault Sainte Marie, where the largest locks in the world permit vessels of 10,000 tons to pass from one lake to the other, and where water-power has been greatly developed for use in the rolling mills and wood pulp industry.

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  • The flex nitive animal gods are not to be confused with the animal not ns ascribed to many cosmic deities; thus when the sun-god Osii was pictured as a scarabaeus, or dung-beetle, rolling its ball Isis lung behind it, this was certainly mere poetical imagery.

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  • As a manufacturing centre Allegheny was outranked in 1905 by only two cities in the state - Philadelphia and Pittsburg; among the more important of its large variety of manufactures are the products of slaughtering and meat-packing establishments, iron and steel rolling mills, the products of foundries and machineshops, pickles, preserves and sauces, the products of railwayconstruction and repair shops, locomotives, structural iron and plumbers' supplies.

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  • In the Theorie nouvelle de la rotation des corps (1834) he treats the motion of a 'rigid body geometrically, and shows that the most general motion of such a body can be represented at any instant by a rotation about an axis combined with a translation parallel to this axis, and that any motion of a body of which one point is fixed may be produced by the rolling of a cone fixed in the body on a cone fixed in space.

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  • In 1901 the number of persons engaged in working of the raw material was 23,263, of whom 8258 were employed in steel smelting and founding, 7781 at blast furnaces in the manufacture of pig-iron, and 7224 at puddling furnaces and rolling mills.

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  • The intermediate plain, which is rolling and slopes gently to the S., is fertile and devoted to wheat and stock.

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  • Many of the patent bronzes are by slight variations in the proportions of the constituents made suitable for casting, for forging, and for rolling into sheets.

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  • But in all the great modern manufacturing processes it is true that metals and alloys, though of the same name, have a different composition according as they are intended for casting on the one hand, or for forging, rolling and drawing on the other.

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  • Steel intended for castings has slightly more carbon and other elements than the cast-steel ingot intended for rolling into plates.

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  • On the west, in the dry region, this is occupied partly by the alluvial deposits of the Indus and its tributaries and the saline swamps of Cutch, partly by the rolling sands and rocky surface of the desert of Jaisalmer and Bikaner, and the more fertile tracts to the eastward watered by the Luni.

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  • It consists of well-watered, wide, rolling plains, and low hills with scanty vegetation.

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  • The new city (ciudad nueva and ciudad novisima) extends eastward over a beautiful tract of rolling country and is extending northward around the eastern shore of the bay.

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  • The Caraballos Occidentales range is very complex; the central ridge is in some parts a rolling plateau, but it rises in Mt Data to 7364 ft., and numerous lofty spurs project from it.

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  • El Reno lies on the rolling prairie lands, about 1360 ft.

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  • In places the sands are fringed by long lines of Casuarina trees; in others, and more especially in the neighbourhood of some of the river mouths, there are deep banks of black mud covered with mangroves; in others the coast presents to the sea bold headlands, cliffs, mostly of a reddish hue, sparsely clad with greenery, or rolling hills covered by a growth of rank grass.

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  • The industries which it has been the principal aim to foster and further develop are shipbuilding (naval and marine), steel foundries and rolling mills, sugar refineries, flour and oil mills, and distilleries.

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  • The town is flourishing and rapidly increasing, and possesses very extensive wire factories (in connexion with which there are puddling and rolling works), machine works, and manufactories of gloves, baskets, leather, starch, chemicals, varnish, oil and beer.

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  • The sloping surface is gently rolling, and has resulted from the uplift and dissection of a nearly level plain of erosion developed on folded, crystalline rocks.

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  • A portion of this province in which weak rocks predominate gives an unusually broad valley region, known as the Valley of Virginia, drained by the Shenandoah river, and the headwaters of the James, Roanoke, New, and Holston rivers, which dissect the broad valley floor into gently rolling low hills.

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  • This axis traces out a certain cone in the body, and a certain cone in space, and the continuous motion in question may be represented as consisting in a rolling of the former cone on the latter.

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  • For the virtual work of two equal anc opposite forces will cancel in any displacement which is commor to the two surfaces; whilst, if one surface be fixed, the displace ment of that point of the rolling surface which was in contact with the other is of the second order.

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  • The formula (13) may be easily verified in the case of the compound pendulum, or of the solid rolling down an incline.

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  • Take, for example, the case of a sphere rolling on a plane; and let the axes Ox, Oy be drawn through the centre parallel to the plane, so that the equation of the latter is 1=cf.

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  • Thus the centre of a sphere rolling under gravity on a plane of inclination a describes a parabola with an acceleration g sin a/(I+C/Ma)

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  • Take next the case of a sphere rolling on a fixed spherical surface.

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  • Let a be the radius of the rolling sphere, c that of the spherical surface which is the locus of its centre, and let x, y, I be the co-ordinates of this centre relative to axes through 0, the centre of the fixed sphere.

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  • When the gravity of the rolling sphere is to be taken into account the preceding method is not in general convenient, unless the whole motion of G is small.

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  • The slightest frictional forcessuch as the resistance of the aireven if they act in lines through the centre of the rolling sphere, and so do not directly affect its angular momentum, will cause the centre gradually to descend in an ever-widening spiral path.

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  • Again, take the case of a circular disk rolling in steady motion on a horizontal plane.

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  • By reasoning similar to that of 30, it appears that OT is the instantaneous axis of rotation 01 the rolling cone.

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  • Now, as the line of contact OT is for the instant at rest on the rolling cone as well as on the fixed cone, the linear velocity of the point E fixed to the plane AOB relatively to the rolling cone is the same with its velocity relatively to the fixed cone.

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  • The path of a point P in or attached to the rolling cone is a spherical epitrochoid traced on the surface of a sphere of the radius OP. From P draw PQ perpendicular to the instantaneous axis.

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  • In the case of two shifting pieces this would involve equal and parallel velocities for all the points of each piece, so that there could be no rolling, and, in fact, the two pieces would move like one; hence, in the case of roIling contact, either one or both of the pieces must rotate.

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  • That the angular velocities of a pair of turning pieces in rolling contact must be inversely as the perpendicular distances of any pair of points of contact from the respective axes.

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  • That the linear velocity of a shifting piece in rolling contact with a turning piece is equal to the product of the angular velocity of the turning piece by the perpendicular distance from its axis to a pair of points of contact.

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  • That for a pair of turning pieces with parallel axes, and for a turning piece and a shifting piece, the line of contact is straight, and parallel to the axes or axis; and hence that the rolling surfaces are either plane or cylindrical (the term cylindrical including all surfaces generated by the motion of a straight line parallel tO itself).

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  • Turning pieces in rolling contact are called smooth or toothless wheels.

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  • Shifting pieces in rolling contact with turning pieces may be called snfooth or toothless rae/es.

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  • In a pair of pieces in rolling contact every straight line traversing the line of contact is a line of connection.

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  • When the point of contact of two wheels lies between theim centres, they are said to be in outside gearing; when beyond theii centres, ip inside gearing, because the rolling surface of the larger wheel must in this case be turned inward or towards its centre.

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  • If the velocity ratio is to be variable, as in s Williss Class B, the figures of the wheels are a pair of rolling curves, subject to the condition that the distance between their poles (which are the centres of rotation) shall be constant.

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  • For full details as to rolling curves, see Williss work, already mentioned, and Clerk Maxwells paper on Rolling Curves, Trans.

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  • To work with a wheel of any other figure, its section must be a rolling curve, subject to the condition that the perpendicular distance from the pole or centre of the wheel to a straight line parallel to the direction of the motion of the rack shall be constant.

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  • The pitch-surfaces of a pair of toothed wheels are the ideal smooth surfaces which would have the same comparative motion by rolling contact that the actual wheels have by the sliding contact of their teeth.

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  • The angular velocity ratio due to the sliding contact of the teeth will be the same with that due to the rolling contact of the pitch-circles, if the line of connection of the teeth cuts the Ca line of centres at the pitchpoint.

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  • If the same rolling curve R, with the same tracing-point T, be rolled on the outside of any other pitch-circle, it will have the fare of a tooth suitable to work with the flank AT.

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  • In like manner, if either the same or any other rolling curve be rolled the opposite way, on the outside of the pitch-circle BB, so that the tracing point T shall start from A, it will trace the face AT of a tooth suitable to work with a flank traced by rolling the same curve R with the same tracing-point T inside any other pitch-circle.

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  • The figure of the path of con tact is that traced on a fixed plane by the tracing-point, when the rolling curve is rotated in such a manner as always to touch a fixed straight line EIE (or EIE, as the case may be) at a fixed point I (or I).

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  • If the same rolling curve and tracing-point be used to trace both the faces and the flanks of the teeth of a number of wheels of different sizes but of the same pitch, all those wheels will work correctly together, and will form a set.

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  • The teeth of a rack, of the same, set, are traced by rolling the rolling curve on both sides of a straight line.

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  • The teeth of wheels of any figure, as well as of circular wheels, may be traced by rolling curves on their pitch-surfaces; and all teeth of the same pitch, traced by the same rolling curve with the same tracing-point, will work together correctly if their pitchsurfaces are in rolling contact.

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  • Epicycloidal Teeth.The most convenient rolling curve is the circle.

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  • Trundles and Pin-Wheels.If a wheel or trundle have cylindrical pins or staves for teeth, the faces of the teeth of a wheel suitable for driving it are described by first tracing external epicycloids, by rolling the pitch-circle of the pin-wheel or trundle on the pitch-circle of the driving-wheel, with the centre of a stave for a tracing-point, and then drawing curves parallel to, and within the epicycloids, at a distance from them equal to the radius of a stave.

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  • The operations of describing the exact figures of the teeth of bevelwheels, whether by involutes or by rolling curves, are in every respect analogous to those for describing the figures of the teeth of spur-wheels, except that in the case of bevel-wheels all those operations are to be performed on the surface of a sphere described about the apex instead of on a plane, substituting poles for centres, and o B2

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  • The first is by the method of instantaneous centres, already exemplified in 63, and rolling centroids, developed by Reuleaux in connection with his method of analysis.

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  • Method 1.By reference to 30 it will be seen that the motion of a cylinder rolling on a fixed cylinder is one of rotation about an instantaneous axis T, and that the velocity both as regards direction and magnitude is the same as if the rolling piece B were for the instant turning about a fixed axis coincident with the instantaneous axis.

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  • If B atops rolling, then the two cylinders continue to move as though they were parts of a rigid body.

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  • These rolling cylinders are sometimes called axodes, and a section of an axode in a plane parallel to the plane of motion is called a centrode.

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  • There is no restriction on the shape of these rolling axodes; they may have any shape consistent with i,olling (that is, no slipping is permitted), and the relative velocity of a point P is still found by considering it with regard to the instantaneous centre.

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  • Reuleaux has shown that the relative motion of any pair of nonadjacent links of a kinematic chain is determined by the rolling together of two ideal cylindrical surfaces (cylindrical being used here in the general sense), each of which may be assumed to be formed by the extension of the material of the link to which it corresponds.

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  • Rolling Resistance.By the rolling of two surfaces over each other without sliding a resistance is caused which is called sometimes rolling friction, but more correctly rolling resistance.

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  • Its moment is found by multiplying the normal pressure between the rolling surfaces by an arm, whose length depends on the nature of the rolling surfaces, and the work lost in a unit of time in overcoming it is the product of its moment by the angular velocity of the rolling surfaces relatively to each other.

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  • The Latin races, championed by Spain and supported by the papacy, fought the battle of the latter, and succeeded for a time in rolling back the tide of revolutionary conquest.

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  • There are many large smelters and reduction plants in the state, most of them at Denver, Leadville, Durango and Pueblo; at the latter place there are also blast-furnaces, a steel plant and rolling mills.

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  • Its industries include iron foundries, rolling mills, puddling furnaces, and manufactures of iron, steel and brass wares and of machines.

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  • The various operations through which the crop passes from this point till flax ready for the market is produced are - (i) Pulling, (2) Rippling, (3) Retting, (4) Drying, (5) Rolling, (6) Scutching.

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  • The inking arrangements are usually very good, for, by a system of racks and cogs which may be regulated to a nicety, the necessary distribution of ink and rolling of the printing surface runs in gear with the travelling type bed or coffin.

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  • He kills his victim by rolling himself round the body till he breaks its ribs, or suffocates it by one irresistible convolution round its throat.

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  • Among its industrial establishments are rolling mills, tube and pipe works, furnaces, steel mills, a brass foundry, and manufactories of electrical railway supplies, boxes, asbestos coverings, enamel work and ice.

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  • Since at any instant the rolling curve is rotating about the point of contact with the axis, the line drawn from this point of contact to the tracing point must be normal to the direction of motion of the tracing point.

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  • Also, since the axis is a tangent to the rolling curve, the ordinate PR is the perpendicular from the tracing point P on the tangent.

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  • Hence the relation between the radius vector and the perpendicular on the tangent of the rolling curve must be identical with the relation between the normal PN and the ordinate PR of the traced curve.

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  • The surface in general is rolling, with a gentle slope northward, and drains through the Little Colorado (or Colorado Chiquito), Rio Puerco and other streams into the Grand Canyon.

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  • It has a variety of manufacturing establishments, among which are cotton and woollen mills, rolling mills, steel mills, foundries, boiler shops, tube works, and works for making surgical instruments and artificial stone.

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  • In the annexed figure, there are shown various examples of the curves named above, when the radii of the rolling and fixed circles are in the ratio of I to 3.

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  • It may be shown that if the distance of the carried point from the centre of the rolling circle be mb, the equation to the epitrochoid is x = (a+b) cos 0 - mb cos (a+b/b)0, y = (a +b) sin 9 - mb sin (a +b/b)0.

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  • Leonhard Euler (Acta Petrop. 1784) showed that the same hypocycloid can be generated by circles having radii of; (a+b) rolling on a circle of radius a; and also that the hypocycloid formed when the radius of the rolling circle is greater than that of the fixed circle is the same as the epicycloid formed by the rolling of a circle whose radius is the difference of the original radii.

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  • If the radius of the rolling circle be one-half of the fixed circle, the hypocycloid becomes a diameter of this circle; this may be confirmed from the equation to the hypocycloid.

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  • West of the divide and south of the depression, south-west Michigan is occupied by the valleys of the St Joseph, Kalamazoo and Grand rivers, by the gently rolling uplands that form the parting divides between them, and by sand dunes, which here and there rise to a height of from loo to zoo ft.

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  • The north and north-west portions of the lower peninsula - including the counties of Roscommon and Missaukee, parts of Wexford and Ogemaw, and those to the north and northwest of these - are occupied by a rolling plateau which attains an elevation at its highest point, north of its centre, of upwards of 1100 ft.

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  • If the lead is therefore rightly proportioned to the standard of alloy, the resulting button will consist of only gold and silver, and these are separated by the operation of parting, which consists in boiling the alloy (after rolling it to a thin plate) in strong nitric acid, which dissolves the silver and leaves the gold as a coherent sponge.

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  • Thus arsenic, antimony, bismuth, tin or zinc render the metal brittle, so that it fractures under a die or rolling mill; copper, on the other hand, increases its hardness, makes it tougher and more readily fusible.

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  • Rolling hills surround it on three sides.

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  • The Rolling Downs formation is regarded as Lower Cretaceous.

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  • The capital expended on the state lines open for traffic was £43, 626, 000, of which sum £7,400,000 was expended on rolling stock and equipment and £36,226,000 on construction of roads, stations and permanent ways.

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  • The method by which the cycloid is generated shows that it consists of an infinite number of cusps placed along the fixed line and separated by a constant distance equal to the circumference of the rolling circle.

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  • Behind the bluffs that form in large part its immediate border its basin is a rolling country, at times sinking into great dead levels like the Yukon flats between Circle City and the Lower Ramparts, some 30,000 sq.

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  • In both cases the curves are epicycloids; in the first case the radii of the rolling and the fixed circles are a(2n - I) /4n and a/2n, and in the second, an/(2n+ I) and a/(2n4-I), where a is the radius of the mirror and n the number of reflections.

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  • Ladoga discharges its surplus water by means of the Neva, which flows from its south-western corner into the Gulf of Finland, rolling down its broad channel 104,000 cubic ft.

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  • The surface is a gently rolling upland, forming a part of the " New England uplands," above which rise isolated mountain peaks and clusters of peaks, and below which are cut numerous river valleys.'

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  • Picturesque rolling plateaus, the three rivers and narrow valleys, from which rise high hills or precipitous bluffs, are the principal natural features of the district over which the city extends.

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  • In dry-country grasses the blades are often folded on the midrib, or rolled up. The rolling is effected by bands of large wedge-shaped cells - motor-cells - between the nerves, the loss of turgescence by which, as the air dries, causes the blade to curl towards the face on which they occur.

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  • The rolling up acts as a protection from too great loss of water, the exposed surface being specially protected to this end by a strong cuticle, the majority or all of the stomata occurring on the protected surface.

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  • There are important foundries, rolling mills for copper, steel and brass plates, chemical works, saw-milling, shipbuilding, tobacco, cotton, sugar, soap and other manufactures.

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  • Considerable improvement has been made in the design of rolled steel shapes; for example the rolling of a 16-in.

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  • Abomey is built on a rolling plain, 800 ft.

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  • The surrounding country varies in character from mountains to rolling prairie.

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  • Not only had Michael succeeded in rolling back for a time the tide of Turkish conquest, but for the first and last time in modern history he united what once had been Trajan's Dacia, in its widest extent, and with it the whole Ruman race north of the Danube, under a single sceptre.

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  • It is a beautiful, rolling country, with a great abundance of streams; more hilly and broken in its western than in its eastern half.

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  • Superficially, each is a simple rolling plateau, much broken by erosion (though considerable undissected areas drained by underground channels remain), especially in the east, and dotted with hills; some of these are residual outliers of the eroded Mississippian limestones to the west, and others are the summits of an archaean topography above which sedimentary formations that now constitute the valley-floor about them were deposited and then eroded.

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  • It consists of wide rolling treeless plains scarred by the beds of many rivers, often dry for a great part of the year.

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  • By the rolling of the cylinders up the vertical bands from the casting the cylinders are raised vertically through a space defined by the position of the leaden regulators.

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  • The ground on which it is built is for the most part gently rolling; originally some portions were swampy and others were marked by precipitous heights, but the swamps have been drained and filled and the heights rounded off.

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  • The gently rolling prairie surface is diversified by an endless succession of broad plains, isolated hills and ridges, and moderate valleys.

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  • The surface is generally rolling and undulating, comprising, with the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, a swelling elevation of land between the three depressions represented by Lakes Michigan and Superior and the Mississippi and the St Croix rivers.

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  • In general terms, however, the surface may be described as a vast rolling plain having a gentle southern and eastern slope.

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  • With the exception of these isolated clusters of hills the western portion of the state consists almost entirely of rolling prairie.

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  • Bilston contains numerous furnaces, forges, rolling and slitting mills for the preparation of iron, and a great variety of factories for japanned and painted goods, brass-work and heavy iron goods.

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  • After the Irish chalk had been worn into rolling downs, on which flint-gravels gathered, the great epoch of volcanic activity opened, which was destined to change the character of the whole north-west European area.

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  • The general surface of the interior highland consists of bare rolling moor-like country, with a great amount of red claylike soil, while the valleys have a rich humus of bluish-black alluvium.

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  • All central Myelat and great parts of the northern and southern portions consist of rolling grassy downs quite denuded of jungle.

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  • For this purpose hydraulic mechanism of Bessemer's design was arranged under the control of an attendant, whose duty it was to keep watch on a spirit-level, and counteract by proper manipulation of the apparatus any deviation from the horizontal that might manifest itself on the floor of the saloon owing to the rolling of the vessel.

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  • Excluding this transitional zone, the Sudan may be described as a moderately elevated region, with extensive open or rolling plains, level plateaus, and abutting at its eastern and western ends on mountainous country.

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  • They are sometimes characteristically flat over wide areas, but are usually gently rolling.

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  • When attacked it seeks to escape either by rolling itself into a ball, its erect spines proving a formidable barrier to its capture, or by burrowing into the sand, which its powerful limbs enable it to do with great celerity.

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  • It is on an elevation from the rolling prairie, which commands a fine view over the valley of the Arkansas.

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  • The Nashville Basin, with a more rolling surface, lies for the most part 400 to 600 ft.

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  • As they neared the ranch, the landscape was gorgeous, with rolling hills and scattered trees.

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  • Its cool year-round creek and rolling hills dotted with wild flowers filled her dreams at night - beckoned.

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  • The creek where the whippoorwills nested, the rolling hills of wild flowers, and the soothing sound of meadow larks - they were all the sights and sounds of a happy childhood.

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  • Caleb began to hurry, and in her haste to keep up with the halo in front of him, she stumbled, falling to her knees and rolling to her side in the wet mud.

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  • Ginger, coiffed and styled by the best, was ready for a fashion photographer's lens while continually rolling her eyes with disdain toward her sister-in-law.

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  • Some marriages start with a lurch before they get rolling.

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  • In spite of the breath-catching vertical drop-offs, boulder-strewn tilting and rolling Jeep roads with their impossible angles of ascent, the solitude of being able to stare for miles and miles in any directions with not a soul in sight—all this melted away to a sense of awe and peace that made any anxiety evaporate like mountain mist on a summer morning.

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  • The day was perfect for rolling the countryside and Dean was pleased his legs had a good memory of the long-absent tasks required of pedaling at seven thousand feet elevation.

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  • Rhyn glanced from the rolling teal waves to his mate.  Her words about Gabe were troubling, and he couldn't determine if she was purposely vague or really didn't know.  Her pretty face was puzzled, and he frowned.  She was beyond tired.  Whatever was happening to her in the underworld, it wasn't good.  Anger filled him.  As much as he wanted to stay in the dream world in case it really was the last time he saw her, he couldn't help her while stuck in the dream.

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  • He appeared as if he'd been rolling in blood; he was soaked through with it, his eyes glowing with the wildness of bloodlust.

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  • Bicycle science and design, including aerodynamics and rolling resistance.

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  • This was based on either a 20-year rolling average or data for the latest year available.

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  • Praise be to Gregory the Great, our 6th century benefactor who started the ball rolling.

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  • Aria (" Rolling in foaming billows ") Bass trombone doubles contrabassoon in tutti passages.

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  • Scheduled rolling blackouts several days per week lasted for many years.

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  • Trouble is, you have to maintain the water at a rolling boil for 5 minutes - an extra burden on your fuel supplies.

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  • Similar in concept to American 10-pin bowling, it is played by rolling a ball at nine wooden pins.

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  • Like Baggy Point, this is a surfing beach pounded by rolling Atlantic breakers.

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  • The rolling year total for double deck busses in June was down only 24 units or 2.5 per cent to 937 units.

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  • The single gear is about 46.5 inches - a 42 tooth chainwheel driving an 11 tooth sprocket with a 12.2 inch rolling diameter.

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  • Most of the rolling chassis was constructed by Face.

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  • Probably several hundred kilometers of quite choppy sea rolling in onto beach does not make easy fishing for ospreys.

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  • The rolling of the ship produces some brilliant unrehearsed choreography.

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  • The Yokohama tires provide an overall rolling circumference of 75 " .

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  • Many authors would liken the rolling sugar fields around Bridgetown to the undulating contours of Dorset or the Cotswolds.

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  • Upstairs there are three spacious bedrooms, all benefit from glorious views of the rolling countryside.

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  • The landscape is one of rolling hills, pasture, small streams, woods and numerous fox coverts.

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  • She is very tired, rolling her head as if to relieve a cramp in her neck.

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  • The rolling fiery wheel was taken to be a representation of Man's tutelary deity, the sea god Manannan.

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  • These elements render steel very difficult to process due to hot shortness during hot rolling.

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  • Two weeks of rolling ship and frozen land requiring vast amounts of brain power just to remain dignified, certainly takes its toll.

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  • Do the reforms deliver pensioner dignity, rolling back means-testing?

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  • The rolling stock is in a state of great dilapidation.

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  • Looking down at the valley, he could plainly see the large drays rolling ponderously up toward the main Camp.

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  • They look very droll when moving, rather like what a canal barge would look like at sea with a few rolling billows about.

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  • The golf course is developed on a hillside and offers challenging and exciting golf on rolling fairways.

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  • At 600 meters above sea level, its rolling fairways need fit legs to walk them but the views are well worth the effort.

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  • From Ulverston the Cumbria Way heads toward the hills across rolling farmland with the scenery becoming more dramatic with every step.

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  • The views are typical of Warwickshire's rolling farmland.

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  • Spread before you are rolling foothills dotted with isolated farming communities and crowned by an array of snow peaks that will leave you breathless.

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  • This trek is an unforgettable journey through the rolling foothills of a district that offers arguably the finest trekking in the whole of Nepal.

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  • Rolling friction is generally considerably less than sliding friction.

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  • Their movement should be free with a slight rolling gait.

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  • When the water reaches a rolling boil, cook the gnocchi in batches.

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  • Rolling greens undulating fairways, hidden greens and thick gorse regarded by many as more difficult than ' The Old ' .

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  • As you can imagine, Southwark is ideal if you're looking for rolling greensward with rocky outcrops.

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  • Soon he's got his camcorder rolling, a raging hard-on in his p.. .

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  • Sounds like someone's into shagging the dead corpse of the Rolling Stones ' brief early 70s heyday.

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  • The open road, the dusty highway, the heath, the common, the hedgerows, the rolling downs!

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  • The island is very picturesque with rolling green hills surrounded by glorious coastal scenery.

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  • Tucked away in the rolling hills are some Amish communities carrying on their traditional rural way of life without modern conveniences.

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  • By rolling the clove hitch up every few moves you will have a back-up should the waist prussic fail.

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  • Landscape Key Characteristics Rolling drumlins with broad areas of wetland and bog in inter-drumlin hollows; small rounded loughs are fringed by moss.

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  • Perhaps the 135 ton monster rolling on to its tracks put the Western Region off diesel electrics to build diesel hydraulics.

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  • So it has taken months to set up a - still imperfect - structure to get the ball rolling.

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  • It comprises rolling ridges and gently incised glens which are mostly aligned in a SW-NE direction.

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  • Sadly, the lesson ended prematurely when his paternal instincts kicked in and he began rolling around in the snow with the children.

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  • The heat soon became insupportable within the circle of furnaces, the rumbling of which resembled the rolling of thunder.

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  • A beautiful, rolling lullaby with a sinister edge that underpins much of their writing.

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  • The London Rolling Stock Team has experience of all the vehicle types used in London, including mainline, light rail and tube.

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  • Beat chicken breasts with a meat mallet or rolling pin to flatten them slightly.

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  • Just inside the county boundary, this delightful village is situated among rolling meadowland, wooded valleys and winding country lanes.

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  • Rolling green hills and desolate moors, or gritty, industrial cities?

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  • These areas range from stark exposed moorland and edges to rolling meadows accompanied by peaceful dales.

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  • A clinging drive followed by a rolling nick then a stroke swiftly brought him back into the game.

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  • The Danish girl saved her first game ball with a lucky nick rolling from the back wall.

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  • Set in 170 acres of rolling parkland, a spa day at Tring will still your thoughts in a busy world.

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  • With dramatic hills and sandy beaches, rolling pastureland and ancient woodlands, Pembrokeshire has much to offer. instant, confirmed, online booking!

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  • After leaving the river, you cross rolling pastureland and woodland to Fontevraud.

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  • By lunchtime you should be clear of these hills and into the rolling pastureland of the Charolais - where the famous cattle come from.

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  • The farm courtyard is in a delightfully peaceful spot, overlooking rolling countryside.

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  • All this is a great tottering pile balanced on a ball, a ball that is about to start rolling downhill.

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  • Really enjoy beating the biscuits up with a rolling pin.

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  • A coniferous plantation on a long ridge from which there are great views to the north toward the rolling Cheviot Hills.

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  • The surface of the basalt plateau is rolling, with a series of broad ridges aligned northwest to southeast.

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  • A sharply pointed toe caught her under the ribs, rolling her onto her back.

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  • A modern studio potter produces a vertical handle by rolling out a coil of clay.

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  • Against a backdrop of majestic snow capped mountains and rolling prairie the history of the region is set.

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  • Hiking is great, lots of space and varying terrain from steep canyons to flat rolling prairie.

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  • And, of course, the Green Dragon rolling forever onwards, a continual vision quest.

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  • This is followed in turn by ' Circus ', a very solid track with a steady rolling rhythm.

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  • Rolling up your acting commissioner Robert to abolish the.

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  • The music, however, is garage rock with hints of The White Stripes and Rolling Stones.

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  • Transfer the rolled out pastry to the top of the pie using the rolled out pastry to the top of the pie using the rolling pin in the same way described for the base pastry.

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  • The Royal Ascot jackpot win started the ball rolling.

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  • To get the ball rolling, the company is looking to recruit 12 parents to join the group.

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  • You only need to post them on FR to set the ball rolling.

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  • To keep the ball rolling, we could do with a result against Norwich.

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  • The first, on friction in cold metal rolling, is in collaboration with Alcan International, Cegelec.

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  • In the gently rolling hills of south west Suffolk, tiny villages sleep the sleep of the quietly forgotten.

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  • Coopers Hill is famous for it's cheese rolling.

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  • However, Hutton does not give any interpretation of the purpose of egg rolling.

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  • Thanks to Gareth for being so alert and keeping the show rolling.

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  • If you support this idea, sign up for the Voices for the Future conference on April 12 and start this process rolling.

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  • Transfer the rolled out pastry to the top of the pie using the rolling pin in the same way described for the base pastry.

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  • At the time of the planned extention, it was proposed that a mix of new rolling stock and existing would ply the route.

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  • With the new length of streetcars, the existing rolling stock would not have been sufficient to serve the additional stops.

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  • The landlady tells Deborah off for sitting " on the garden " while ignoring the local ruffian rolling a joint by the front door.

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  • Or rolling out a tartan rug and getting sand in egg and cress sandwiches on a beautiful but windswept beach?

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  • Explore the rolling hills, moorland and woodland, see castle ruins, and a rich variety of wildlife.

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  • Bordered by beautiful seashore and protected by a long ribbon of rolling dunes, the Aquitaine coastline unfolds a superb and varied landscape.

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  • We design, manufacture and install bespoke rolling security shutters and grilles; developed to provide maximum security.

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  • The long rolling stock siding terminated at the eastern end of the platform seen on the left.

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  • The rolling clouds were whiter, too, and the waters looked more silvery than ever.

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  • Some nice touches include slightly flared sleeves to up ventilation to the forearms when wanted or to make rolling them up easier.

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  • Although it won't have you rolling in the aisles the film is still worthy of a few sniggers.

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  • Once we do this, it's like rolling a snowball down a hill.

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  • Cardiff has been attracting change like a rolling snowball attracts snow.

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  • The group is on a rolling program to replace all stiles with kissing gates.

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  • Policy measures would aim at a more efficient use of rolling stock - higher occupancy, higher rate of operating time.

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  • The rolling stock, apparently, dates from the 1950s.

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  • By this time the weather was deteriorating rapidly and a lightning storm rolling up the valley.

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  • The first PrepCom started a rolling text covering the subject matter of the Treaty.

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  • This is new to us and it is rough going, the side wash gives the hands a ducking in rolling surf.

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  • Some sound like rolling thunder, some just like loud crack with no basses, like large tree falling down.

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  • Other excerpts are more unexpected, with Stephen Cummings sounding timeless on the shimmering rolling thunder of All For Love.

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  • Boundless as ocean tide Rolling in fullest pride Through the world far and wide Let there be light!

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  • Never live with your sister, he said, pinching a thin ridge of rolling tobacco into position.

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  • What a delightfully tranquil setting in rolling countryside, formal gardens and a Kentish mansion.

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  • Even Rolling Stone, the avatar of the underground music scene, wrote a glowing tribute of Rick's resurgence.

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  • But the phrase ' inoperable cancer ' had leaped unbidden into Kate's mind and was rolling relentlessly around in there.

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  • Finish by rolling up the white underlay, placing it in the box on top of the other materials and replacing the lid.

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  • Specific missions will have you rolling your katamari to a certain size, or for a specific type of object, or even underwater.

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  • Take the train into the heart of this unspoiled borderland with its big river valleys, tumbling streams and rolling upland.

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  • We're investing massive resource in rolling out 8Mbps across the country not just urban areas by spring 2006.

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  • It is set in rolling meadows, beside a couple of huge, I mean vast, houses.

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  • The Loire and Vienne valleys are perhaps the most characteristically French of all the regions with their chateaux, rolling vineyards and meandering rivers.

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  • Working for Muskie, Thompson wrote, " was something like being locked in a rolling box car with a vicious 200-pound water rat.

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  • Decorative paddle wheelers still go rolling, rolling, rolling their way up the Mississippi.

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  • Roddy Renfrew started the ball rolling with a set of gentle, tho occasionally more acerbic, wit.

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  • The peba (Tatusia novemcincta) represents a group with a large number of movable bands in the armour; while the apar (Tolypeutes tricinctus) and the other members of the same genus are remarkable for their power of rolling themselves up into balls.

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  • In these circumstances the conventions of 1883 were concluded, and the great companies partially relieved the government of its obligations by agreeing to contribute a certain proportion of the cost of the new lines and to provide the rolling stock for working them.

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  • The arrangement and appropriation of the tracks in a station materially affect the economical and efficient working of the traffic. There must be a sufficient provision of sidings, connected with the running tracks by points, for holding spare rolling stock and to enable carriages to be added to or taken off trains and engines to be changed with as little delay as possible.

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  • They are represented as delighting in massacres and torture, and it is said that popular tradition in India still retains the story that Mihiragula used to amuse himself by rolling elephants down a precipice and watching their agonies.

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  • The females of some snare-spinning species, like the Pholcidae, carry it in their jaws; but in the case of the Argyopidae the females usually leave the cocoon to its fate as soon as it is constructed, sometimes rolling it in a leaf, sometimes attaching it by a stalk to a branch.

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  • The line, stations, sheds and stores are all solidly built, and the rolling stock is sufficient and of the best quality (see further under Finance, below).

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  • Across the direction of rolling the tenacity is about 18 tons per sq.

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  • The curve may be regarded as an epitrochoid (see Epicycloid) in which the rolling and fixed circles have equal radii.

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  • Nothing can surpass in beauty the rank grasses and bright flowers that grow on the lowlands and rolling uplands of a virgin prairie - now hardly to be found in the state.

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  • The best sort is gathered by the hand like opium; sometimes the resinous exudation of the plant is made to stick first of all to cloths, or to the leather garments of men, or even to their skin, and is then removed by scraping, and afterwards consolidated by kneading, pressing and rolling.

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  • Below them was a vast space, at the bottom of which was a black sea with rolling billows, through which little tongues of flame constantly shot up.

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  • Just above them, and almost on a level with their platform, were banks of rolling clouds which constantly shifted position and changed color.

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  • The soldiers lifted the canteen lids to their lips with reverential faces, emptied them, rolling the vodka in their mouths, and walked away from the sergeant major with brightened expressions, licking their lips and wiping them on the sleeves of their greatcoats.

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  • He could see puffs of musketry smoke that seemed to chase one another down the hillsides, and clouds of cannon smoke rolling, spreading, and mingling with one another.

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  • In some places she raised her voice, in others she whispered, lifting her head triumphantly; sometimes she paused and uttered hoarse sounds, rolling her eyes.

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  • Don't make jokes! cried Anatole, suddenly rolling his eyes.

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  • And, still rolling up his sleeve, he went out to the porch.

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  • The embrace of the woman meant rolling on the ground in the rapture of divine love.

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  • Then he fell upon the carpet, rolling and writhing, while scream after scream resounded through the house.

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  • Ulster Unionists welcome the rolling out of the regional diabetic retinopathy screening program.

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  • Beryl was rolling the pastry for the rhubarb pie.

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  • A second rolling circle event makes a long linear +ve strand which is again cleaved by the ribozyme activity.

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  • The winding roads and rolling hills near the Tennessee border provided ample pleasures at 40 to 50 mph.

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  • Walk on rugged hillsides, through forests, over grouse moors and rolling farmland to the coastal cliff tops.

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  • The event was a celebration of lesser published, underground limericks which left the 70 strong audience rolling in the aisles.

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  • Heavy rolling woke me in the morning; I turned in all standing, so went right on the upper deck.

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  • Is Bristol, set among the rolling green hills of the west, really the most polluted city in the UK?

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  • Experts, who are already sifting through the wreckage of the rolling stock, are blaming a signals failure for the tragedy.

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  • Coopers Hill is famous for it 's cheese rolling.

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  • Roll out the pastry with the rolling pin into a circle that is a little bit bigger than the top of the pie dish.

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  • Chris Henry was on the decks playing some scouse house to get things rolling.

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  • In totally secluded position with wonderful views across rolling countryside from its terrace.

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  • They 'd be kicking and rolling about - exactly how you would be if you were shackled up.

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  • Helps reduce rolling motion over rough terrain and conceals the shoulder harness straps which can otherwise irritate a baby 's ears.

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  • Sick pay From date of joining pilots are entitled to basic salary for 3 months in any rolling 12-month period.

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  • To sidetrack for a moment, last year Prince topped the Rolling Stone list of Money Makers.

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  • Approximately 8 acre smallholding with views over rolling countryside.

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  • There are places in that piece where I get these four snare drums to keep rolling over each other like waves of the sea.

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  • Although it wo n't have you rolling in the aisles the film is still worthy of a few sniggers.

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  • Once we do this, it 's like rolling a snowball down a hill.

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  • Anglo-Saxon (the parent language of English) was a rolling, sonorous, thunderous language well-suited to poetry and oration.

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  • Dried spaghetti can be cut accurately by rolling it gently under a scalpel blade to score it, and then snapping.

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  • Margaret 's bringing along her rolling pin, and her best stentorian voice, to keep everyone in order.

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  • On arrival a female Striped dolphin was found to be barrel rolling around in the surf.

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  • Rolling Stone, the greatest rock'n roll swindle forever !

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  • Breakfast telly was all about routine, repetition with a rolling bank of viewers unable to give more than 15 minutes of their time.

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  • It 's sort of Joy Division meets the Rolling Stones with some great thrashing guitars.

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  • Boundless as ocean tide Rolling in fullest pride Through the world far and wide Let there be light !

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  • Even Rolling Stone, the avatar of the underground music scene, wrote a glowing tribute of Rick 's resurgence.

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  • Their unasked question was - what should we do to set the ball rolling?

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  • But the phrase ' inoperable cancer ' had leaped unbidden into Kate 's mind and was rolling relentlessly around in there.

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  • We 're investing massive resource in rolling out 8Mbps across the country not just urban areas by spring 2006.

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  • The third bedroom with twin beds also has a dressing area, full ensuite shower room and views to verdant rolling hillsides.

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  • They carried the rope to the cave in a large coil, rolling it along down the passage like a wagon wheel.

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  • Working for Muskie, Thompson wrote, was something like being locked in a rolling box car with a vicious 200-pound water rat.

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  • All around the distillery site are rolling, fertile fields and in the distance wilder upland areas.

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  • The resultant blues are deeply funky affairs brimming with spiky guitar licks, rolling bluesy piano and Otis 's emotion-packed, world-weary vocals.

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  • The second most expensive activity is rolling out the distribution, service and support infrastructure to support the increased customer base.

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  • Motor skills may develop at a delayed rate, including sitting, rolling over, and walking.

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  • As your baby reaches six months, he has likely reached many important baby milestones, such as rolling over, imitating sounds, and grasping objects.

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  • When your baby starts rolling, crawling and walking, do the proper baby proofing.

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  • Beginning at the base, start rolling diapers and tucking them into the rubber band.

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  • Create sock roses by rolling each sock tightly from the toe to the opening.

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  • Poke floral wire into the opening created by rolling the sock, and wrap the wire with floral tape.

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  • Begin rolling diapers and tucking them into the rubber band.

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  • Continue rolling and tucking the diapers until the next layer of the cake is a few inches smaller than the Boppy.

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  • New parents sometimes hesitate to point out their child's failure to meet certain developmental steps, such as rolling over, crawling, walking, and even talking.

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  • To parents, it's exciting to see their little one reaching for toys or rolling over for the first time.

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