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Cage
noun
An enclosure made of bars, normally to hold animals.
Exact(56)
While those abuses impacted people overseas, Homan Square – said to house military-style vehicles, interrogation cells and even a cage – trains its focus on Americans, most often poor, black and brown.
With the defendants this time enclosed in a soundproof cage fitted with a microphone controlled by the judge, Morsi had limited opportunity to question the authority of the court.
"First you take the liver out, then you open the rib cage and take the innards out.
If the contents of the containers seems too good to be true – the US version featured a "gimp" in a cage, a Breaking Bad-style meth lab, a voodoo death ritual den and an (empty) coffin – then it can presumably be attributed to the "magic" of television.
The cage is back beneath the stairs, the puppy collar has been scrubbed and the urine-cleaner is ready.
True love ensues, with the subtlety of a cage fight.
Once inside the defendants' cage in the courtroom, they attempted to hide their faces from television cameras using their hoods, collars or sheets of paper.
Similar(4)
Four minutes after he left, a gamekeeper arrived, and let himself into the cage-like trap.
The footage showed that a jay had been used as a lure in a cage-style trap which had caught a rare goshawk.
The whole thing is then topped with a layer of buckminsterfullerene, a form of carbon in which the atoms are arranged in tiny, cage-like spheres.
But Dr Smalley's discovery turned out to be much more important for the explosion of research it prompted into the properties of structures at the smallest end of the scale.Related items LAST WORD: Nanotechnology's unhappy fatherMar 11th 2004The buckyball was merely the first in a whole new family of fullerenes, a group of symmetrical carbon-cage molecules.
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