Using the back edge of the mast shoe as your guide check to see the string between the shrouds and aft edge of the mast shoe are parallel. |
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Why is my right hand so numb that I cannot get the winder into the slot without letting go of the mast with my left. |
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He uses an elaborate mast step bridge which elevates the mast shoe so the mast base is never in the bilge water. |
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One of the ship's officers triangulated the height of the wave using the ship's mast and the horizon to determine that it was 112 feet high. |
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He hung a lamp on the mast and shortened the sail, but it was past midnight when Setisia retired to the cabin. |
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Bear left on the top to join the tarmac of the mast access road and the trig point summit pillar is passed on the left. |
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She is also expected to break the record for a woman circumnavigating the globe if her mast holds out. |
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The slapping of shrouds against a mast where a cutter lay moored in the inner bay. |
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There has been no consultation about this, and the proposed mast is an absolute monstrosity. |
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Four British soldiers mooch nonchalantly with rifles on the shoreline as the mast of a German ship flails over just three metres away. |
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To land, small hooks on the UAV's wings catch hold of rope suspended from the system's extendable mast and arms. |
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Meanwhile, a 25-metre phone mast in Gilstead, which protesters said would be a blot on the landscape, is also set to be approved. |
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They are worried the mast would become a blot on the landscape and fear the health hazard from radiation emissions. |
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Normally, lung mast cells occur around blood vessels, large airways, and nerves. |
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Using wireless broadcast technology, each mast has a range of up to 25 miles and can deliver speeds of up to 1.5Mbps. |
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Now the yards of the mizzen mast are braced around and the sheets of the staysails are eased. |
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He passed the anti-aircraft ships at less than mast height in the very mouths of their guns and launched a torpedo at point blank range. |
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The Hoveringham has one long unbroken hold before a stern mast and small wheelhouse at the stern. |
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The mast will not come down until something else has broken because as long as all the stays and such are in place, the mast will stay. |
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Sweden, Norway, Finland and Germany planned to fly flags at half mast in respect for the dead and missing. |
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The flag at Fulford Gold Club has been flying at half mast as a mark of the club's respect for Mr Duston. |
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The spritsail was a simple triangular sail, whose leading edge was fastened to the mast by a rope. |
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The mast will be next to an estate of houses and bungalows and the owners will suffer an immediate loss of value on their properties. |
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As the knell died away, a black flag slowly rose up the mast and stopped half-way. |
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The 24-metre high mast was to be located on a small tree-topped knoll above the Owenmore River. |
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Before the bows are the remains of another mast and port and starboard pairs of bollards. |
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When he stood, he glanced out the window and was able to see just the top of the mast of the anchored sloop. |
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The sail is left fed into the boom and mast so all you have to do is pull it up. |
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Only the creak of the mast and the boom, the rippling of the sail and the gurgling of the passing water reached Miri's ears. |
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Several large edible crabs have burrowed under the mast and others live inside the hollow structure. |
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A vicar has done a dramatic 11 th hour U-turn over controversial plans to set up a mobile phone mast on top of a church tower. |
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Angry residents claim a mobile phone mast was installed near their homes without their knowledge. |
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A planning minister said last year that banning the mast on health grounds would be wholly unjustified. |
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In May a wind sail mast smashed her in the face, leaving her traumatised and minus some teeth. |
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People are campaigning against plans for a mobile phone mast in Nelson because they say it will spoil the view of a nature reserve. |
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They are also of the opinion that the mast is unsightly in a high amenity residential area, and that it is extremely high. |
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A council spokesman said notices were posted in the area and residents who were within a certain radius of the proposed mast were consulted. |
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Yet this one is so poorly made that the mast at sea would have twisted, making the ship unstable and difficult to control. |
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If you build a cat with an unstayed mast it would be very impractical to put it in the middle. |
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The Freedom 20, built by Catalina Yachts, features the unique Freedom unstayed mast system. |
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The main mast is 18 feet, 4 inches unstayed and the jib mast is 10 feet, 4 inches unstayed. |
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The application is to erect a 15-metre mast with six antenna and two dishes to be built within a compound. |
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But with an unstayed main mast and a retractable or fold up bowsprit my usual objections to them are overcome. |
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However, an unstayed mast must be of significantly larger diameter to compensate for the lack of stays. |
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Such ships were robustly built with stout planking secured to massive framing timbers, with a single mast possibly rigged with a square sail. |
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The sailor controls the mast with their arms and steers in a standing position, moving body weight to guide the vessel. |
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Large sprit rigs leave the sprit standing, and the sail is furled by brailing it up to the mast and headrope. |
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Histamine, which is released by mast cells in persons with urticaria and other allergic reactions, classically is associated with pruritus. |
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The argument is that a three-masted ship had three yards on each mast for the square sails, making nine in all. |
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So why would any person in their right mind nail their colours to the mast of a leaky dinghy rather than a majestic tall ship? |
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The bid to put up the mast comes a week before a public meeting is to be held to discuss the controversial plan. |
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Worried residents also fear the mast could devalue their homes and put their health at risk. |
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Beneath the surface the green gloom parted to reveal the foggy apparition of the cutter's mast pointing us down towards the wreck. |
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We believe that if this mast is erected it will lead to a devaluation of land and property in the area. |
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The work of preparing the copper rings around the wooden mast and gold-plating them is going on. |
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During the early phase, mast cells release mediators that lead to vasodilation, edema and bronchoconstriction. |
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A planned telephone mast has been denounced as a monstrosity by people in Wootton Bassett. |
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The applicant had demonstrated that health and safety guidelines had been complied with and approval of the mast was recommended. |
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It has been demonstrated that DEPs directly degranulate mast cells and increase histamine levels and symptom severity in humans. |
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A worried mum is convinced a mobile phone mast is responsible for the plague of health problems affecting her children. |
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For a while the ship kept bucking and sidling, the sails filling, now on one tack, now on another, till the mast groaned aloud under the strain. |
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The boat's pitching all over the place, the mast is a 70-foot-tall, wet, slippery stick. |
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A dense band of fibroblasts, collagen fibers, proteoglycans, and occasional mast cells encase the granuloma. |
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Angry parents and residents were protesting yesterday over a proposal to build a mobile phone mast near an infant and junior school. |
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As we came about, I heard a grinding noise and watched the mast lean over and fall into the water. |
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The coachroof is marked with holes from the handrails and mast wiring, which will be patched and redrilled later. |
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Earlier Wednesday, fierce winds snapped the mast of a Polish sailboat in the Baltic Sea off the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad. |
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He sees the hypotenuse of a right triangle made by the deck, the mast and the front edge of the beam moving down to the deck. |
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Ellen MacArthur's bid to circumnavigate the globe in record time received a cruel setback when her mast was damaged. |
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In contrast, PKC inhibition did not suppress the growth of normal mast cells. |
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Angry residents are up in arms over a proposal to site a giant mobile phone mast near their homes. |
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When mast cells degranulate they release tryptase, in addition to histamine and prostaglandins. |
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The pilots in the first attack used a radio station's mast near Pearl Harbour to home in on. |
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It was no cabin cruiser, but with the rudder salvaged from the Minnow, and a mast and sail added, the boat should be navigable. |
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Similar results were observed when mast cells were stained red, using chloroacetate esterase histochemistry. |
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Protests were staged in Kew on Monday over fresh attempts by a phone company to put up a mast in North Road. |
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These are the eosinophils, neutrophils, and basophils, mast cells, and monocytes. |
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Having had a wander and my fill of tall mast sailing ships and sea, I decided to head for home. |
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Officers believe that from a distance, the mast would appear to be a lighting column. |
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Once the size of the main course was set, the sizes of the other sails followed, graded according to the mast and height above deck. |
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The telecommunications mast uses new technology to be adopted in a scanner-proof police radio system across Scotland. |
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But residents say only two people appear to have been sent letters about the new mast which is designed to look like a telegraph pole. |
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The main camera is mounted on the telescopic mast at the front of the trailer. |
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Between the foc'sle store and the hold are the remnants of a mast stump, with the hole in the decking above still clearly identifiable. |
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And as a mark of respect for the victims of the tsunami the national flag will be flown at half mast on civic buildings next week. |
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Villagers have been warned they could lose their church if controversial phone mast proposals are not accepted. |
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The red and white ballon flag flew at half mast as a mark of respect to the two people who had earlier died in a horrible crash. |
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Corus corporate flags at plants across Britain and Europe are flying at half mast as a mark of respect. |
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It is not the mast but the bank of aerials at the top that radiates microwave energy. |
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The mast rose up behind it, pointing to the sun above and masked only by dense shoals of damselfish, a fantastic sight. |
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Luckily, the mast of the sinking boat was spotted and the team immediately responded. |
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They cut the mast and sails loose and watched as it vanished into the depths below. |
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The narrow trunk cabin terminates just aft of the main mast and provides wide side decks for sure footing. |
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The billowing white sail on the mast seemed to blend in with the far off clouds that covered the horizon. |
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I have been approached by a company that wants to erect a telecommunications mast on my land. |
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Soot and smoke rose to meet the falling building and the television mast disappeared. |
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At one point on the drive up, a lightning bolt hit a radio mast 100m away from us. |
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To obtain a complete overview of the ship, we swim along the main mast out to the open water. |
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A similar application for the installation of a temporary mast on the same land was rejected in October. |
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Pass a radio mast and follow the track that services it back to the lighthouse car park. |
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An explanation that I favour for the sinking is that the snort mast float valve jammed open, flooding the boat. |
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Adding a 15m telephone mast and all its associated equipment would further make this waste area even more of an eyesore. |
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He is exhausted and as he docks the boat, he falls over and lies with the mast on him. |
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Is it any surprise that ruthless people would nail their colours to the mast of the what they considered was the winning side? |
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Winchester must wait months before the inquiry over a controversial phone mast is completed. |
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It might have been better if we hadn't nailed our colours to the mast without being completely happy with them. |
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For each tree we calculated the proportion of seedlings in each year out of the total number recorded in the five largest mast years. |
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At each mast episode the numbers rose, then fell sharply as the young seedlings died. |
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These allowed a submarine to surface and crash dive without having to send out crewmen to dismantle the mast in an emergency. |
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Thus once a patch appeared,, dense recruitment usually continued there in succeeding mast years. |
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The first assumption is that mast crops and small mammal populations are synchronized across a wide range. |
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However, red chokeberry might contribute more soft mast for wildlife consumption. |
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All sites experienced at least one mast failure, and mast failure years were generally consistent across sites. |
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Once a new patch became established, seedlings recruited there in each succeeding mast episode. |
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Seedlings became established in patches in new locations in each successive mast year for several reasons. |
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Except on small ships the main and foremasts always carried double mast tackles. |
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This compound is employed as a classic mast cell secretagogue that releases histamine. |
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Battling acrophobia and nausea as you scale the mast of this 104-foot-tall ship to the crow's nest and peer down into the roiling water below. |
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The mast has been shown to adhere to safe radiation levels but Ryan is adamant that it gives him headaches and dizzy spells. |
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At the top of the mast was a red flag, a Jolly Roger if he'd ever seen one. |
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My health is at risk through stress and the mast has not even been erected yet. |
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Her rig is barquentine with fore and aft sails on all except the forward most mast which has 3 square sails. |
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The difference between a barque and a ship is the way the aftmost mast is rigged. |
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They agreed the mast was in the wrong place and would dominate the landscape in an area of open countryside. |
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Those thought to play critical roles are mast cells, basophils, eosinophils, lymphocytes, and the airway epithelium. |
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The second assumption is that juvenile recruitment into bird populations must operate at the same scale as mast production. |
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During the late phase, cytokines are released that prolong inflammation and activate eosinophils, basophils, lymphocytes and mast cells. |
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Spinning the young boy lunged at the mast pole, stifling a cry as he felt his feet lose footing as he was dangling over the dark gaping ocean. |
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Sails were blown away, the mainmast was sprung, and the mast was carried away and lost, with everything attached to it. |
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We were just beginning to congratulate ourselves on a successful launch, when there was a huge crack, and the mast was carried away overboard! |
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Dutifully, he beached his skiff, dragged his mast and sails into their shed, and finally crawled off to his shack, to welcome slumber. |
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With the ship in the water, its time now to step the mast and attend to the rigging. |
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Aloft, there were the conventional ratlines on both sides of each mast to gain access to the rigging. |
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The mast mounted sight is equipped with a thermal imager and a television camera on a gyrostabilised platform. |
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Above the topmast was added the topgallant mast and above that the topgallant mast royal. |
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Each mast was lifted and guyed with the two permanent backstays and two temporary forestays. |
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After the topgallant got to be pretty standard shipwrights started making the topgallant mast taller. |
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On the topgallant mast is the topgallant sail, on big vessels divided into two sails, like the topsail. |
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Preset the length of the topping lift by clipping the pole to the mast ring padeye at the midpoint of the pole. |
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When not used as a halyard or topping lift it stows at the mast and is ready for any emergency use. |
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The main mast top mast was bent to the deck with cordage and sail draping across to starboard. |
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Saturday, Dave and I finished rigging the boat, raised the mast and bent the sails on. |
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Each mast is supported on four legs, spaced widely enough for articulated lorries to pass underneath. |
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The recent damage to the track on the mast where the mainsail is attached is the main focus of her concern, with some tough miles still to come. |
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While moving a boat on a trailer, a group of us sustained electrical injuries when the mast hit a high tension power line. |
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On the other, we are anxious about the impact of a mobile phone transmitter mast in our neighbourhood. |
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In our first trials we found that the mast could be safely stepped on a single standard frame. |
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A few minutes later I was shinning up the mast to whip a flag halyard to the stays. |
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We have been told the trees will camouflage the mast but when the leaves have gone it will be clearly visible. |
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She found herself laying on the broken mast of the ship, with white sails and splinters of wood floating lazily around her. |
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The mast is designed to carry antennae and communication dishes and the application included associated ground-level equipment cabinets. |
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Shipwreck D is so well-preserved that cord tied in a V-shape at the top of the ship's wooden mast is still clearly visible. |
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She stared at the pirate as he leaned up against the fore mast of the ship and grabbed a rope that connected to one of the sails for balance. |
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The two shipwright's or mast axes are representative of the most common Hathaway tools. |
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If the mast was not unstepped, sailboat owners should check the halyards. |
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Bound together by mutual distrust, both sides end up lashing themselves to the mast of rigid law. |
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When Odysseus journeyed back from Troy, his men tied him to the mast of his ship when the Sirens tempted him to leave it. |
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The Japanese coast guard officers said they spotted a Chinese flag on the ship's mast and bow, and a protest banner in Chinese claiming the area as Chinese waters. |
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In a Japanese study of mast cells from nasal mucosa of individuals with perennial allergic rhinitis, quercetin significantly inhibited antigen-stimulated histamine release. |
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Components such as keel, engine beds, mast step, structural bulkheads and rigging loads are all connected to the grid, resulting in a very rigid and strong structure. |
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When we found she could sail in stronger winds, we fitted a stronger mast and rigging and, later, a keelson, an internal timber spanning three frames. |
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Wind shrieked through the rigging as the mast groaned under the strain of its huge triangular sail that drove the vessel before the wind, its rigging taught as harp strings. |
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The failure to fly a flag at half mast was widely interpreted as an expression of disrespect. |
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The Captain motioned with his eyes and his head to the main mast top yard. |
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Working high up a mast on the end of a yardarm isolated in the expanse of the southern ocean, it was an uncanny experience to eyeball one of these creatures. |
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The mast is quite flexible, and, with this much sail and no standing riggings, the top is prone to twist to leeward considerably when the wind picks up. |
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Neither Howard nor any Minister had nailed their colours to the mast in a way that would have made revelation of torture stories an embarrassment for them. |
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I want that schooner mast patched and sail rigged as soon as possible. |
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It was launched without mast and rigging from Eskside Wharf after a friend of the Jenkinsons, Susan Crookes, smashed a bottle of champagne across the bow at her fifth attempt. |
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A compressed gas system allows the mast to be extended to a maximum height of 10 metres above ground level, providing a clear, wide view of a traffic scene. |
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David noticed that square holes had been cut in the hull to allow oarsmen to row the ship despite the fact that it possessed a single mast with a sail. |
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Modern and novice sailors are horrified about the lugsail being distorted by pressing against the mast on one tack but the effect is quite slight. |
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Turning, he could see the mast of the schooner held by the tackle. |
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The microwave-based system operates on the basis of line-of-sight signals, whereby a signal is beamed from a mast to the receiver on the television set. |
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Flags were flying at half mast as a mark of respect for the Duke of Norfolk who died two days ago at the age of 86, the Arundel ground being part of the Duke's estate. |
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A row has broken out between a village church and its neighbours after plans to put a phone mast disguised as a flagpole in its belltower were revealed. |
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A day to celebrate a great Victory so slipping back to my youthful days before the mast as a boy sailor I will be happy to join in the traditional Naval celebrations. |
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I did not wish to take a cabin passage, but rather to go before the mast and on the deck of the world, for there I could best see the moonlight amid the mountains. |
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Few companies nail their colours to the mast on some new technique or format without getting the support of at least a handful of other companies and possibly a committee. |
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Regional synchrony for mast crops has been postulated by previous authors. |
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Furthermore, our observations suggest that a prominent mast cell reaction seems more related to pattern and nuclear grade I carcinomas than to poorly differentiated neoplasms. |
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Some patients feel better after taking aspirin or a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, probably because mast cell degranulation releases prostaglandins and leukotrienes. |
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Both lead to the release of mast cell and basophil immune mediators. |
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We have no explanation for this difference, but it is possible that allergen caused release of mast cell proteases and this might have cleaved the cytokine. |
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However, we do not discount the possibility that other cells types, such as mast cells or basophils, may also contribute to the production of Th2 cytokines in this model. |
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Products of complement activation cause smooth muscle contraction and increased vascular permeability and induce degranulation of phagocytic cells, mast cells, and basophils. |
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Over a number of years, the weakened structure has collapsed further, leaving a tangled mess of debris, including the aft mast and superstructure. |
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Controversial plans to set up a mobile phone mast on top of a church tower are expected to be approved by councillors tomorrow despite fierce opposition. |
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A glance revealed that the main topgallant mast had been carried away. |
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One of the main advantages of the boat is the use of a mast and vertical spar to achieve the same mast height and sail area as the Bermuda rig would set. |
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I grinned and shinnied up a side rope ladder up to the mast almost. |
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All I could think about was my handsome brother dressed as a Mohawk swinging from the mast of the ship and landing on deck like a swashbuckling pirate! |
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As the mast rises into the suspension shoe, it locates and supports itself from the suspension shoe, subsequently allowing the climbing brackets to climb up the mast. |
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The side decks are uncluttered except for the necessary genoa track and the mast shrouds are well inboard for easy passage and improved sheeting angles. |
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Residents mounted a campaign against the plans, saying a telecommunications mast would not only spoil the landscape but pose a potential health risk. |
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They can stick to the cells for weeks and researchers have discovered that the usually bent antibody will unbend to secure itself to the mast cells. |
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To get to the top of a mast to adjust a wire one would be pulled up in a boatswain's chair by a rope looped through a pulley at the top of the mast. |
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One aspect of fitting a bobstay is that instead of the rear end of the bowsprit pressing down into its mounting on the mast step, it is now pushed backwards towards the mast. |
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Or, as good Aussies, we could fly the flag at half mast while we hold our precious slouch hat to our chest and hang our heads in shame at letting this government sell us out. |
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The old one got damaged during the 2002 Navaratri festival in the temple when, as is customary, an elephant had to touch the flag mast before bringing down the festival flag. |
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Far from it, unstayed masts are just one end of the mast spectrum. |
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They saw the top main mast fall, could see the billowing smoke from her starboard side, and the bowsprit of another ship sticking beyond her stern. |
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The planned new mast features six antennae, two telecommunications dishes, and at ground level, radio equipment cabinets and ancillary development. |
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Flags flew at half mast at North Marine Road yesterday as a mark of respect for events in America and the teams lined up on the field for a minute's silence before the start. |
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The college's flag has been at half mast all week, as a mark of respect. |
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For instance Royal American Mounted Police flags fly at half mast outside police stations over the whole North American Union whenever one officer is killed. |
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The small sail at the top of a mast was called a stargazer, and so is a Mediterranean fish with eyes set at the top of its head, and a horse that holds its head back. |
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The new mast stuck around nine metres out from the roof and was supported by surrounding cables, but it was closer to local houses than the old one. |
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A bit further forward, and about halfway back to the engine, a mast lies from the centre line across the port side of the wreckage, with another small cargo winch nearby. |
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A large mast with an opening at the top would extend out of the sail of the Kilo and suck in air to circulate around the sub while the submarine recharged. |
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Opioids can cause itching, by releasing histamine from mast cells. |
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The main structural bulkhead supports the hull sides at the chain plates and the cabin top at the mast step is drastically cut away so the interior is more open. |
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Further back, the port side of the deck is low in the silt and either the hold coamings are offset to starboard or the forward mast is offset to port. |
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Castor and Pollux were also the names given by Roman sailors to St. Elmo's Fire, or the corposant phenomenon, when the flame effect on the mast of a ship appeared double. |
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More recently in the US it has come to be also used in cases where the foretriangle is enlarged by placement of the mast at a point nearly amidships. |
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One nice thing about the high foretriangle is that gybing under spinnaker in heavy air does not demand flawless runner work to keep the mast in the boat. |
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Men who have climbed a gyrating mast to furl a sail in a storm or have laboured at the helm in rough seas will never underestimate the power of the sea. |
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This timber seems to have only been used on decked ships, spreading the thrust from the mast through the rowers' thwarts and from the ribs to the hull. |
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Ingestion of certain foods, including strawberries, tomatoes, shrimp, lobster, cheese, spinach, and eggplant, also can trigger hives through direct mast cell degranulation. |
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His legs are racing forward like two horses pulling a runaway carriage and his arms circling outward in the air like two sailors tied to the mast of sinking ship. |
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He's really in a dinghy, its mast little taller than its sole occupant! |
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Originally, the main would have would have been run up the mast on a boltrope. |
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Large, majestic white oaks are the predominant mast producers on the ridge, along with some red oaks and chestnut oaks. |
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All of the sailors had their ears plugged up with beeswax, except for Odysseus, who was tied to the mast as he wanted to hear the song. |
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In addition, ketotifen and olapatadine are mast cell stabilizers and H1-receptor antagonists. |
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Climb the mast and check the masthead antennae, standing rigging attachments, swages, spreaders, radar reflector, Windex and the mast itself. |
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But during daylight, Jim stuck a bucket over the mast to act as a radar reflector. |
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The mast is a cylindrical metal shaft that extends upwards from the transmission. |
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We put everything straight, stepped the long-boat's mast for our skipper, who was in charge of her, and I was not sorry to sit down for a moment. |
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At the top of the mast is the attachment point for the rotor blades called the hub. |
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The first of these was against the proposed installation of a television transmitting mast on North Hessary Tor in the centre of the moor. |
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An attempt to secure cables to the main mast appears only to have resulted in its being snapped off. |
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When the black purga blows it can pile the snow higher than a ship's mast overnight. |
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Deane reported retrieving a bilge pump and the lower part of the main mast, both of which would have been located inside the ship. |
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The ship stayed in the area about ten days, the crew replacing a broken mast and fishing for food. |
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Continuing westward, the shallop's mast and rudder were broken by storms, and their sail was lost. |
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This antenna uses a single mast insulated from ground and fed at the lower end against ground. |
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When the ship was in position with the forestem to the south, a grave chamber was constructed just behind the mast. |
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In this virtuous voyage of life hull not about like the ark, without the use of rudder, mast, or sail, and bound for no port. |
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Special receivers were mounted in He 111s, with a radio mast on the bomber's fuselage. |
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The antenna mast still stands and is used for local terrestrial television transmission, local commercial radio and DAB broadcasts. |
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Again the outer walls survived and the eastern parts, including the theatre and the BBC Television studios and aerial mast, were saved. |
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Wind shear affects sailboats in motion by presenting a different wind speed and direction at different heights along the mast. |
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However, the sail can become jammed in the mast or boom slot if not operated correctly. |
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In both a ketch and a yawl, the foremost mast is tallest, and thus the main mast, while the rear mast is shorter, and called the mizzen mast. |
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The stay running forward from a mast to the bow is called the forestay or headstay. |
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When the Shamrock V was revealed, she was an outdated wooden boat with a wooden mast and performed poorly to windward. |
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He rescued fellow sailor Alex Thomson in the Southern Ocean, then the yacht Ecover had a mast failure with them both aboard. |
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A stricken ship within 3 miles of the shore had to fly at the main mast a yellow and black flag borne quarterly from sunrise to sunset. |
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During daylight, the level was marked with a ball and pulley system attached to the mast. |
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Unfortunately the building fell into some disrepair and the mast partially dismantled. |
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After the ship set sail Dionysus invoked his divine powers, causing vines to overgrow the ship where the mast and sails had been. |
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The application is for a 70m high mast on Gowk Hill, on the Ray Estate, Kirkwhelpington, which is owned by Lord Davenport. |
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A council is threaten-ing action after a mobile phone mast was put up without planning permission. |
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Hexham-based Amec's application for a mast at Gowk Hill, near Kirkwhelpington, was also given the go-ahead. |
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The aggravation was consistent with eosinophilic inflammation, mast cell degranulation, and thymic stromal lymphopoietin expression in the ear. |
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Use of plasma histamine levels to monitor cutaneous mast cell degranulation. |
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Finally, Allied radar eventually became sufficiently advanced that the schnorchel mast could be detected beyond visual range. |
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The mast was now square in section and located toward the middle of the ship, and could be lowered and raised. |
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This acted as a mechanism to catch and secure the mast before the stays were secured. |
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I rolled the gennaker, trimmed in the mainsail, eased off the mast rotator and runners and spun the boat into the wind. |
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They claim the mast in Emmet Street is posing a health hazard and is an environmental threat. |
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The thieves did not take the boats' rudders and centerboards, though a mast and a boom from another boat were taken, he said. |
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The low height of the radar mast makes it difficult to acquire and lock onto a target while maintaining a safe distance. |
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Franz Link, a product manager for Mitsubishi Forklift Trucks, advises that you check for smooth mast operation with and without a load. |
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Meta tag misuse, like cybersquatting, is considered a criminal act, which is generally not covered by mast policies. |
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The pivot cannons were placed fore and aft of the main mast and positioned roughly amidships along the deck's center line. |
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Cytologic evaluation of the soft tissue mass revealed a predominance of poorly stained mast cells with metachromatic intracytoplasmic granules. |
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Accumulation of low density lipoproteins in stimulated rat serosal mast cells during recovery from degranulation. |
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For example, in systemic mastocytosis, the KIT mutation may not be reliably detected if there are insufficient numbers of mast cells. |
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The bomber carried away the mast tops and the aerial then crashed into the sea to the cheers of the rest of the convoy. |
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Mastocytosis is a clonal neoplastic proliferation of mast cells that accumulate in one or more organ systems. |
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At one point in the voyage a storm came up and broke the mast off the ship. |
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These occur when a substance directly triggers mast cells to release their contents, eg following injection of X-ray contrast media. |
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Microvascular density and mast cells in benign and malignant pheochromocytomas. |
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The fruit of the beech tree is known as beechnuts or mast and is found in small burrs that drop from the tree in autumn. |
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The drug blocks the binding of IgE to the IgE receptor on the surface of mast cells and basophils. |
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This is understandable, as when the mast cell becomes activated, several other strong mediators besides histamine get released, too. |
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Cromolyn sodium is considered an antiasthmatic, an anti-allergic and a mast cell stabilizer. |
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Since then, this condition has evolved to include a number of mast cell activation disorders associated with acute coronary syndrome. |
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The mast weighs 140 tons and is held up by 5 sets of stay levels. |
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Another mechanism involves chemoattractant substances, such as cytokines and growth factors, which can lead to an accumulation of dermal mast cells. |
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The mast provides VHF coverage of both FM and DAB to a wide area around the mast including Derbyshire, Greater Manchester, South Yorkshire and West Yorkshire. |
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Packed with granules of histamine, heparin and other chemical mediators, mast cells degranulate, releasing their contents, in response to the presence of allergens. |
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The moor is crossed by the A6024 road between Longdendale and Holmfirth, whose highest point is near the prominent mast of Holme Moss transmitting station. |
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Additionally, Bermuda sloops only have a single sail behind the mast. |
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Activation of mast cells by streptolysin O and lipopolysaccharide. |
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It was an early form of mast partner but was aligned fore and aft. |
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Along with epinephrine, long-term use of mast cell stabilizers, such as cromolyn sodium or nedocromil sodium, and antihistamines may be considered. |
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Many pre-formed mediators are involved in an anaphylactic reaction, including histamine, tryptase, chymase, mast cell carboxypeptidases, platelet activating factor and others. |
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Another possibility consists of feeding the mast or the tower by cables running from the tuning unit to the guys or crossbars at a certain height. |
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For broadcasting, mast radiators are the most common type of antenna used, consisting of a steel lattice guyed mast in which the mast structure itself is used as the antenna. |
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Cutaneous mast cell tumor and mastocytosis in a black-masked lovebird. |
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Later versions had a rectangular sail on a single mast, which was used to replace or augment the effort of the rowers, particularly during long journeys. |
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The keel was a flattened plank about twice as thick as a normal strake plank but still not strong enough to withstand the downwards thrust of a mast. |
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The transmitter is located at Winch Wen, on the side of Kilvey Hill and for technical reasons does not use the same mast on the top of Kilvey Hill as its sister station. |
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In a modern facsimile the mast can be lowered in 90 seconds. |
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Now and anon a little puff of breeze caught the foresail and bellied it out for a moment, only to let it flap back against the mast, limp and slack, once more. |
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About Mastocytosis Mastocytosis is a rare disease in which immune cells known as mast cells abnormally build up in the skin, bone marrow and other parts of the body. |
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A dismasting often means the dominoing of one mast into the other, down through the decks, cannoning the cargo through the hull below, and sinking the ship very quickly. |
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