Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet SHELLS


SHELLS

Definition av SHELLS

  1. böjningsform av shell

Antal bokstäver

6

Är palindrom

Nej

13
EL
ELL
HE
HEL
LL

13

67

82

67
EH
EHL
EHS
EL
ELL


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Exempel på hur man kan använda SHELLS i en mening

  • Other common names are ear shells, sea ears, and, now rarely, muttonfish or muttonshells in parts of Australia, ormer in the UK, perlemoen in South Africa, and pāua in New Zealand.
  • Beads represent some of the earliest forms of jewellery, with a pair of beads made from Nassarius sea snail shells dating to approximately 100,000 years ago thought to be the earliest known example.
  • Dynamite is an explosive made of nitroglycerin, sorbents (such as powdered shells or clay), and stabilizers.
  • Firstly, commoners' rights were being eroded through army use, including the firing of live artillery shells, and piecemeal enclosure of land around the margins.
  • Examples include bones, shells, exoskeletons, stone imprints of animals or microbes, objects preserved in amber, hair, petrified wood and DNA remnants.
  • Among the Lacandon Maya who inhabited the tropical lowland regions of eastern Chiapas, the caustic powder was obtained by toasting freshwater shells over a fire for several hours.
  • This can take place through both biological and nonbiological processes, though biological processes, such as the accumulation of corals and shells in the sea, have likely been more important for the last 540 million years.
  • POSIX defines system and user-level application programming interfaces (APIs), along with command line shells and utility interfaces, for software compatibility (portability) with variants of Unix and other operating systems.
  • It is the eon during which abundant animal and plant life has proliferated, diversified and colonized various niches on the Earth's surface, beginning with the Cambrian period when animals first developed hard shells that can be clearly preserved in the fossil record.
  • The depot was a warehouse on Beauregard Street, where the troops had stacked some 200 tons of shells and powder.
  • This field, managed by specialists known as zooarchaeologists or faunal analysts, examines remnants such as bones, shells, hair, chitin, scales, hides, and proteins, such as DNA, to derive insights into historical human-animal interactions and environmental conditions.
  • Shrapnel shells were anti-personnel artillery munitions that carried many individual bullets close to a target area and then ejected them to allow them to continue along the shell's trajectory and strike targets individually.
  • It is a common substance found in rocks as the minerals calcite and aragonite, most notably in chalk and limestone, eggshells, gastropod shells, shellfish skeletons and pearls.
  • Paleoclimatology uses a variety of proxy methods from Earth and life sciences to obtain data previously preserved within rocks, sediments, boreholes, ice sheets, tree rings, corals, shells, and microfossils.
  • The bacteria naturally live in brackish or saltwater where they attach themselves easily to the chitin-containing shells of crabs, shrimp, and other shellfish.
  • Specifically, when the photon hits electrons, it releases loosely bound electrons from the outer valence shells of atoms or molecules.
  • Clams have two shells of equal size connected by two adductor muscles and have a powerful burrowing foot.
  • Since electrons are electrically attracted to the nucleus, an atom's electrons will generally occupy outer shells only if the more inner shells have already been completely filled by other electrons.
  • The electron configuration of these elements do not follow a unified trend, though the outermost shells do correlate with trends in chemical behavior:.
  • This mixture is then put inside small rice paper casings or wheat flour casings similar to communion wafers shaped into nautical shapes such as shells.


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