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chaining
noun
The act or process by which something is chained.
Exact(59)
He rattled through the stories of Turing's peculiarities – burying his silver bullion and then forgetting where; chaining his mug to his radiator; cycling in his gas mask to ward off hay fever.
Daisy chaining – groups of teenagers having sex in each others' homes?
Pocock was arrested after chaining himself to the digger for 10 hours as part of a blockade at the Maules Creek coalmine in New South Wales's Leard state forest in November.
He was arrested last year for chaining himself to machinery while protesting against a coalmine in New South Wales, he recently complained to the referee about hearing homophobic slurs on the football field and he is an advocate for marriage equality.
Is Dany doomed after chaining her dragons?
Output must be increased by innovation and productivity gains, not by chaining employees to their workbenches.But the psychological breakthrough in the German labour market should not be underestimated.
By chaining several companies, ownership (and risk-bearing) can be separated from control.In this section A gathering storm Webbing together Got game Mandarin 2.0 The cartel of silence Tricks of the trade New kid on the stock Paper queen ReprintsThe Italians are unquestionably Europe's champions when it comes to pyramid-building.
One squabble over a siding in 1884 was resolved by chaining a District line train to the track: three Metropolitan engines tried to pull it loose but failed.Although, even then, "trains in drains" were a favourite target for grumbling journalists and frazzled commuters, the system that resulted from all this chaos was a marvel.
The old practice of chaining books to their cases was gradually abandoned; and the change to the present arrangement, standing books with their spines facing outward, began in France probably with the personal library of the lawyer, councillor of state, historian, and bibliophile Jacques-Auguste de Thou (d. 1617).
In the form of learning called chaining the subject is required to make a series of responses in a definite order.
Similar(1)
"About twenty per cent of the dogs involved in fatalities were chained at the time, and had a history of long-term chaining," Lockwood said.
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