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normal attitudeの例文

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  • Once this was completed, the ISS returned to its normal attitude.
  • This is a normal attitude for humanity.
  • Mutu seems to be getting his normal attitude back after spending some very bad days ."
  • Like most Europeans, the British have fairly sophisticated or, if you will, normal attitudes toward sex.
  • Four reaction wheels ( arranged so that any three can provide complete three-axis control ) were used for normal attitude control.
  • After a reconciliation between the two, Wolfram happily decides to annul their disengagement to a comically shocked Yuri and proceeds to return to his normal attitude towards their engagement.
  • Balwant Singh must have lacked the normal attitude of other Indian royalty to only allow images to be produced that displayed the magnificence of his life; who between patron and painter first suggested this very informal approach is unknown.
  • But when the threat ends, said Hugick, " People revert to their normal attitudes, " which he described as " let them deal with their problems and we'll deal with our problems ."
  • "We have given the British government a great deal of time and space in which to consider the matter, " he said in a speech in Dublin with an impatience uncharacteristic of his normal attitude toward Blair, an ally.
  • International leadership imposes a kind of tax on the people of the United States, and the normal attitude toward taxation is expressed in a ditty attributed to the former chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, Russell Long ( D-La . ):
  • But also for 3-axis stabilized spacecraft for which the normal attitude is not inertially fixed the spacecraft is said to make a slew if the attitude is changed in another way and with another, mostly higher, rate than when in the basic attitude control mode.
  • He could not control the further progress of the flight on account of the rather poor stall performance of the aircraft type, the extraordinary difficulties to control a stall during instrument flight conditions, and the insufficient height available for transition from a stall to a normal attitude after the aircraft . The copilot could not level off the aircraft because of the very low altitude.
  • In 1709 Davenant published " Reflections upon the Constitution and Management of Trade to Africa ", in which he " reverted to his normal attitude of suspicion and outright hostility towards the Dutch . " This pamphlet advocated renewing the Royal African Company's monopoly on slave trade on the basis that the Dutch competition " necessitated the maintenance of forts, which only a joint-stock company could afford . " Waddell states that there had been close collaboration between the company and Davenant and that he may have been compensated for writing it.