If an ordinary window-type air conditioner is placed on a table in the middle of a room, it will run like in a window. But the heat that it would normally radiate outside will be radiated into the room. It will be simultaneously cooling and heating the room. (Just like if you leave the door open on your fridge. Same effect.) But the a/c unit is not perfectly efficient, so it will generate more heat than cooling, and the room will get warmer as time goes by. This will dry the clothes. Note that the a/c unit will also remove moisture from the air on the cooling coils inside the unit. But it may or may not be able to keep that moisture from returning to the closed room. In any case, the heat the a/c unit generates will dry the clothes because it will get warmer in the room.
Nothing special, just ordinary everyday clothes.
Yes, Irish people wear ordinary clothes, such as jeans, t-shirts, dresses, etc.
Many, many different fabrics. But most ordinary clothes, such as jeans and t-shirts, are cotton. Check the label on your clothes, and it will tell you exactly what fabric it is made of.
Yes, it is used to mean ordinary, usual, or common, e.g. everyday clothes.
I dont think so if your in primary school if you wear uniforn because the rules would be wear your uniform not ordinary clothes
Possible but not likely with an ordinary firearm
I'm not sure i think they just wore rag clothes
Alice and Esme wanted to buy her clothes to help her "fit in"
Mostly just ordinary clothes but if they're going to a formal function they might wear a kilt.
There is no particular traditional Christmas costume in Ireland. People just wear ordinary clothes. They will put on good clothes for parties or going to church services, but no particular costumes.
they were kept in a small enclosed room where there was no heating they were starved and only had 10% of calories out of 200 they were stripped in order to sell clothes.
People here in Canada just wear ordinary clothes and only during the first hour of meditation do they wear robes usually brown or grey to put over their own clothes.