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colour up การใช้

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  • Colour up for more body and thickness.
  • The images produced very high quality photographs in either monochrome or colour up to 300mm x 400mm.
  • This leaves the outer ranges of coat colour up to a judge's discretion when competing in conformation shows.
  • As a general rule, cavalry uniforms tended to be more varied, and it was not uncommon for each mounted regiment to retain its own facing colours up to 1914.
  • On completing his apprenticeship Grimaldi started life as a miniature-painter, working only in water-colours up to 1785, when he made some essays in enamel painting.
  • When they arrive at a point where the colour changes, the knitter brings the new colour up underneath the old one ( to prevent holes ) and starts knitting with it.
  • After independence and recognition by FIFA and UEFA the team continued to play in the same colours up until 1994, when the board of NK Olimpija which was based in the same city.
  • Well, as much as any medieval bishop can shine . . . Yet another ( and hopefully last ) of the Gregorian mission bishops, this guy's a bit more shadowy than even Mellitus, since we don't have the gout or the miracles to colour up his life.
  • :: Sydney has hardly any articles, none with line boxes ( List of Sydney railway stations ), Brisbane ( List of Brisbane railway stations ) has about half the articles there, and with a linebox that looks like the old Melbourne style, but with the line colour up the top ( some of the colours make it hard to read ).
  • Underside with the transverse markings similar; the ground colour up to the median black transverse line chocolate-brown; beyond, the forewing from costa to vein 4 light ochraceous, inwardly paling to white below vein 1; the hindwing crossed by a diffuse dark brown band; ocelli as in the male, followed by a dull ochraceous-brown postdiscal area, the terminal margins broadly brown, inwardly defined and crossed subterminally by highly sinuous dark lines.
  • In his research, Brendan was concerned to allow monkeys long-term learning opportunities comparable to that available for children, and so his subsequent work with Cebus apella was a long and staged programme in which the monkeys were trained to seriate by size and classify by shape and colour up to 12 objects on a touch screen  a level of ordering competence that only emerges in human development at around 6 / 7 years of age and had never before been demonstrated in a non-human species.