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range pole
noun
A rod or pole, marked with alternating red and white bands, used by surveyors for sighting
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Right now, Ooh La La is the most talked-about range of pole-dancing wear in the British sex industry.
The results indicate that the field data are about 90% of those calculated using the AASHTO procedure in the measured wind-velocity range, assuming no pole deflection.
After various series of measurements, the corridor was found as the main site where the general characteristics of the channel can be determined (coherence bandwidth, delay spread, impulse response variation, etc)., since the poles in the corridor are a good approximation (in almost all magnitude and phase range) to the poles obtained in all rooms.
On any given day, bargains might range from fishing poles to perfume, toboggan wax to musical piggy banks.
They say an increasing number of these species are extending their range towards the poles as previously cold waters between Norway and the North Pole become warmer and more hospitable.
In the world of "Where's My Money?" relationships rule and do so with gleeful tyranny, tormenting those who live in it, churning up their lives, warping their perspectives and narrowing their emotional range between the poles of anguish and rage.
Winds on the polar plateau are usually light, with monthly mean velocities at the South Pole ranging from about 9 miles per hour (4 metres per second) in December summerr) to 17 miles per hour (8 metres per second) in June and July winterr).
Late-successional forests often have complex disturbance histories that can result in stands with widely varying structure, ranging from young pole stands to uneven-aged old growth.
Since Swarm satellites move along near-polar orbits, MLTs are clustered around morning and evening sectors and partially spread over the entire 24 h MLT range at the poles.
Another reason may be that the mood states, rather than being categorical entities, may be better viewed within a continuum ranging from one pole (depressive symptoms) to another (manic stage; cf. [ 7, 26]), and that within this continuum BP I and BP II stages are barely detectable by self-rating.
After reading the vignette, participants were asked to rate their evaluations on a 7-point differential semantic continuum, ranging from one pole (scored 1) to the other (scored 7), and to report if the decision to hospitalize the patient was justified or unjustified, correct or wrong, reasonable or unreasonable, professional or not professional, and effective or ineffective.
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