简体版 繁體版 English 한국어
登録 ログイン

inside curveの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • On the inside curve of the shaft is a thin fin of plastic.
  • Armstrong, trying to maximize his speed, was hugging too much to the inside curve.
  • Then the instrument is bent over steam and a slat glued onto the inside curve to fix it.
  • The sponge can be squeezed into various shapes and thus permits sanding inside curves and grooves or rounded edges.
  • The inside curve is frequently thrown at the batters hands so as to jam them forcing a foul hit.
  • Inside curves were ground on a silicon carbide grinding wheel of appropriate grit with water running on the wheel.
  • The whorl section is ovate with the dorsum on the inside curve broader than the venter on the outside.
  • The type of grinding and smoothing equipment depended upon whether one was creating straight line, outside or inside curved bevels.
  • It was not uncommon to have pieces with a combination of outside and inside curve as well as straight line bevels.
  • Stax chips have the flavoring spread across the inside curve of the crisp whilst Pringles have them across the outside curve.
  • There is also something called the inside curve where ball start off the plate on the inside and curves into the strikezone.
  • The electronic readers do not always catch tags mounted on license plates and have difficulty reading tags inside curved windshields on vehicles like the Range Rover, officials said.
  • The unusual, " eyecatching " design features a curved concrete deck that is suspended only on the deck's inside curve by a single pair of suspension cables.
  • The parent and child communities are on the inside curve of a great meander in the Monongahela River in Southwestern Pennsylvania creating a degraded cut bank turned ramp and terrace on the opposite shore where is situated.
  • The locomotive also made a test run to Upper Ferntree Gully where damage was caused to the cleading and lagging of the low-pressure cylinder, due to it striking the platform, which in those days had an inside curve.
  • A longstanding theory is that the name originated in the Gallo-Roman period and comes from the Latin " antverpia " . " Antverpia " would come from " Ante " ( before ) " Verpia " ( deposition, sedimentation ), indicating land that forms by deposition in the inside curve of a river ( which is in fact the same origin as Germanic " waerpen " ).