The L shape is met to point upwards.
I just got my nose pierced and it is the L- Shaped
nose stud. The piercing is supposed to be pointed upward
or else it is more easy to fall out.
- i hope this helped
Yes. It means something like "by looking upwards, I see downwards". It was meant as a defence of astrology.
Which way the antenna is pointing.
Car insurance is meant for anyone with a legal driving license in the country that they drive to insure their car. Usually aged 18 and upwards. In some countries it is 21+
The spino had a crocodilian head. It was filled with inward-pointing canine teeth. The inward design was meant for keeping the prey from escaping its mouth.
Anne specifically asked for that book after pointing it out to her father in a shop window. It was actually meant to be an autograph book, but Anne intended to use it as a diary.
His main knee problem was caused by his foot pointing towards fine leg rather than the batsman when he bowled; this meant his body twisted on his knee as he completed his action.
If it wasn't, then the arms and/or legs could become deformed because they aren't meant to bend upwards. It is already a tight fight, and having an arm caught doesn't help.
because the upthrust force of the water acting on the stone was pushing the stone upwards meaning it was acting against the downwards weight of the stone (its weight). This meant that the downwards force was decreased and therefore felt lighter :)
A bullet necklace is a trophy, it says 'I killed someone that was trying to kill me'. Snipers pointing rifles at each other, one lives, one dies. The victor would go to the corpse of the enemy and take the round that is chambered that was meant for him.
Generally speaking, the atmosphere and outer space is above Oregon. If by "above" you euphemistically meant "north" since "north" is usually "upwards" on a map, then the answer would be Washington State and then the Canadian province of British Columbia.
Meant... As in "he was meant to have it."
-ex has a number of related meanings; out, over and away, and is used in English also to mean (mainly, but not limited to) "out of, from," but also "upwards, completely, deprive of, without," and "former". Knowing English, I predict other uses, speaking ex cathedra.