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untarred การใช้

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  • The road is mostly untarred, with some tarred segments.
  • It can also be accessed through an untarred earth road from Aboh.
  • There were still some untarred stretches in the hinterland.
  • Roads were left untarred until 1978 / 9, after which streetlights followed.
  • Many roads in Sebokeng have deteriorated and remained untarred for more than 30 years.
  • Many roads remain untarred, manholes are open and a lack of security exists.
  • They drove onto an untarred road and then took the boy about 100 yards away from the vehicle.
  • Today, the village is linked to the Bamenda town, by a half-tarred / half-untarred road.
  • After the drainage pipes were laid in 2013, BBMP has laid roads in all the areas which were previously untarred.
  • Perry was one of the few senior Colombian ministers untarred by charges that the campaign accepted several million dollars from drug traffickers.
  • Even if they did have one, the vehicles use untarred roads and the tyres still carry mud from these roads onto other stretches.
  • Tar-like petroleum by-products can also be used for modern oakum . " White oakum " is made from untarred material.
  • All day long, trucks trundle across bridges, dumping gravel on untarred highways leading to 30 blocks of offices scheduled to open by the June deadline.
  • The "'C15 "'is an untarred in eastern Namibia travelling 448km through the Mata Mata border post, leading into South Africa.
  • The tower was of 6 storeys, brick-built and untarred, with 4 sweeps driving 3 pairs of stones ( 1 French and 2 grey ).
  • "' Caspersnek Pass "'is an untarred Drakensberg pass that straddles the border between the Limpopo and Mpumalanga provinces of South Africa, to connect the Blyde valleys.
  • Except for a waif or two, and its amiably indistinct protagonist, it left nothing untarred : not the government, not the opposition, not just about any German in range of the author's multitudinously capacious sights.
  • Teas from any other place, or in any other ships or vessel, bohea, per pound, fifteen cents; souchong and other black teas, per pound, twenty-seven cents; hyson, per pound, fifty cents; other green teas, per pound, thirty cents; coffee, per pound, four cents; cocoa, per pound, one cent; loaf sugar, per pound, five cents; brown sugar, per pound, one and a half cent; other sugar, per pound, two and a half cents; candles of tallow, per pound, two cents; candles of wax or spermaceti, per pound, six cents; cheese, per pound, four cents; soap, per pound, two cents; pepper per pound, six cents; pimento, per pound, four cents; manufactured tobacco, per pound, six cents; snuff, per pound, ten cents; indigo, per pound, twenty-five cents; cotton, per pound, three cents; nails and spikes, per pound, one cent; bar and other lead, per pound, one cent; steel unwrought, per one hundred and twelve pounds, seventy-five cents; hemp, per one hundred and twelve pounds, fifty-four cents; cables, per one hundred and twelve pounds, one hundred cents; untarred cordage and yarn, per one hundred and twelve pounds, one hundred and fifty cents; twine and pack thread, per one hundred and twelve pounds, three hundred cents; salt, per bushel, twelve cents; malt, per bushel, ten cents; coal, per bushel, three cents; boots, per pair, fifty cents; shoes, slippers and goloshoes, made of leather, per pair, seven cents; shoes and slippers, made of silk or stuff, per pair, ten cents; wool and cotton cards, per dozen, fifty cents; playing cards, per pack, ten cents; all China ware, looking glasses, window and other glass, and all manufactures of glass ( black quart bottles excepted ) twelve and a half per centum ad valorem; marble, slate, and other stones, bricks, tiles, tables, mortars and other utensils of marble or slate, and generally all stone and earthen ware, blank books, writing paper, and wrapping paper, paper hangings, pasteboards, parchment and vellum, pictures and prints, painter's colors, including lampblack, except those commonly used in dyeing, gold, silver, and plated ware, gold and silver lace, jewellery and paste work, clocks and watches, shoe and knee buckles, grocery, ( except the articles before enumerated ) namely, cinnamon, cloves, mace, nutmegs, ginger, anniseed, currants, dates, figs, plums, prunes, raisins, sugar candy, oranges, lemons, limes, and generally all fruits and comfits, olives, capers, and pickles of every sort, oil, gunpowder, mustard in flour, ten per centum ad valorem; cabinet wares, buttons, saddles, gloves of leather, hats of beaver, felt, wool, or a mixture of any of them, military ready made, castings of iron, and slit and rolled iron, leather tanned or tawed, and all manufactures of which leather is the chief value, except such as herein otherwise rated, canes, walking sticks and whips, clothing ready made, brushes, anchors, all wares of tin, pewter, or copper, all or any of them, medicinal drugs, except those commonly used in dyeing, carpets and carpeting, all velvets, velverets, satins, and other wrought silks, cumbrics, muslins, muslincts, lawns, laces, gauzes, chintzes, and colored calicoes, and nankeens, seven and a half per centum ad valorem.