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airer การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The defining feature of this airer is its pulley system.
  • Some of us have known a better, airer, more American way.
  • Mac Somhairle, king of Airer-Gaeidhel, and the nobles of the Cenel-Conaill besides, were slain.
  • The airer consists of a rack with several horizontal wooden rails, usually 4 to 7, known as laths, with two rack ends, originally cast iron.
  • The airer is lowered to be loaded or unloaded, then raised to move the items up into warmer air and as out of the way of room occupants as the ceiling height allows.
  • However, the word " airer " naturally carries the meaning of the word'coast'when applied to maritime regions, so the placename can also be translated as " Coast of [ the ] Gaels ".
  • In turn, Woolf suggests that this gave rise to the terms " Airer Gaedel " and " Innse Gall ", respectively " the coast of the Gaels " and the " Islands of the foreigners ".
  • A pulley clothes airer, sometimes described as " Victorian ", " Edwardian ", or " Lancashire ", can be loaded and unloaded at a convenient height, and hoisted out of the way to ceiling height while the clothes dry.
  • Woolf has suggested that the name " Airer Go韉el " replaced the name " D醠 Riata " when the 9th-century Norse conquest split Irish D醠 Riata and the islands of Alban D醠 Riata off from mainland Alban D醠 Riata.
  • The mainland area, renamed Airer Go韉el, would have contrasted with the offshore islands of " Innse Gall ", literally " islands of the foreigners . " They were referred to this way because during the 9th to 12th centuries, they were ruled by Old Norse-speaking Norse Gaels.
  • "O'Domhnall was defeated, with his army; and Maelsechlainn O'Domhnaill, king of Cenel-Conaill, was slain there; and the Gilla-muin閘ach O'Baoidhill, and Mac Somhairle, king of Airer-Gaeidhel, and the nobles of the Cenel-Conaill besides, were slain.
  • Joe Kennedy, an orange proton, a son of No? an airer, Panama, a dyad, a bicycle manufacturer, a surname from the Scottish Borders, a half canton, 1 dPa s, a structure in Seville, a section of The Globe and Mail, serine, a black pigment, a university in Seattle, a propagating disturbance.
  • W . M . Hennessy believed that " airiur " or " airer " indicated that Cenn Fuait was a headland on the coast of Leinster; but no such headland is known, and it has been objected that while " airiur " can mean " coast ", it also denotes the border region between two neighbouring territories.