transmarine การใช้
- Bushatli was said to have fought for the crop yield against the transmarine zduhai.
- The first transmarine countries to recognise Slovenia were Canada and Australia on the 15, respectively 16 January 1992.
- The dry dock was first used June 23, 1921 when Transmarine corp's SS " Suhulco " docked.
- But Transmarine's freight, like half the cargo loaded and unloaded in Houston, is generally going or coming from elsewhere.
- In 1989, Transmarine Propulsion Systems replaced both mechanical pumps with electric pumps, saying they could not get parts for the mechanical pumps.
- It performs a general freight switching service between the foreign-line connections and the docks on Newark Bay operated by the Transmarine Corporation.
- In a story recorded in the area of Cetinje, a zduha was mortally wounded on Mount Loven in a battle against the transmarine zduhai.
- Map鷄 Institute of Technology ( MIT ) is known in the fields of mathematics, science and engineering studies with the Philippine Transmarine Carriers ( PTC ), a ship manning business and training company.
- The Philippine Transmarine Carriers-Carlos Salinas Jr . Foundation then launched the children's storybook, " On Tatay's Boat ", in March 2010 at the Manila Ocean Park.
- In 2008, the Map鷄-PTC College of Maritime Education and Training ( CMET ) was established in cooperation with the Philippine Transmarine Carrier, Inc . ( PTC ), one of the country s leading companies in crewing management.
- He said the local agent for the ship, Transmarine Alabama, brought in a supply of diesel fuel Tuesday because the ship's fuel was about to run out and " it would have been a dead ship ."
- In August 2009, the Philippine Transmarine Carriers-Carlos Salinas Jr . Foundation, together with Outlooke Pointe Foundation, launched Sagip, a storybook writing competition on the theme Saving our seas, to foster English literacy and promote marine environmental awareness.
- "It's an extra five hours in transit time to go up the channel, " said Michael Bird, who manages the Houston office of Transmarine Navigation, a shipper based in Long Beach, Calif . It is worth it if the cargo is destined for Houston, he said.
- Neither the main article, nor this list, makes any reference to broadcasting, instead only noting conventional applications of point-to-point communication, enumerated as " local exchanges ", " long-distance lines ", " transmarine transmission ", " wireless telephony from ship to ship ", and " wireless telephone from ship to local exchange ".
- :The charitable donations of the three immediate predecessors of Athelstan to the churches of England, gave rise to an intercourse between the English and the transmarine Britons, who still lamented their banishment from the land of their fathers; and when the Normans, under Rollo depopulated Bretagne, numbers of the natives sought and obtained an asylum under the protection of Athelstan.
- The operated property is leased from the Submarine Boat Corporation, a noncarrier, and consists of a standard-gage, steam railroad, located at Port Newark in the southeastern part of the city of Newark, N . J . The main line extends from a connection with the tracks of the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey and The Pennsylvania Railroad Company to the docks, wharves, and other terminal facilities operated by the Transmarine Lines on Newark Bay.
- Philip Schaff states : " The council of Hippo in 393, and the third ( according to another reckoning the sixth ) council of Carthage in 397, under the influence of Augustine, who attended both, fixed the catholic canon of the Holy Scriptures, including the Apocrypha of the Old Testament, . . . This decision of the transmarine church however, was subject to ratification; and the concurrence of the Roman see it received when Innocent I and Gelasius I ( A . D . 414 ) repeated the same index of biblical books.
- Philip Schaff says that " the council of Hippo in 393, and the third ( according to another reckoning the sixth ) council of Carthage in 397, under the influence of Augustine, who attended both, fixed the catholic canon of the Holy Scriptures, including the Apocrypha of the Old Testament, . . . This decision of the transmarine church however, was subject to ratification; and the concurrence of the Roman see it received when Innocent I and Gelasius I ( A . D . 414 ) repeated the same index of biblical books.
- Anthony a Wood said of Leonard Digges that he " was esteemed by those who knew him in Univ . coll . a great master of the English language, a perfect understander of the French and Spanish, a good poet, and no mean orator . " Wood says also that " upon his supplication made to the venerable convocation " of University College Oxford, Digges was made M . A . in 1626, " in consideration that he had spent many years in good letters in transmarine universities . " He lived in the College from then until his death in 1635, and was buried in the College chapel ( no longer standing ).