Want this question answered?
it is slot
that is a narrow street.dont go to the narrow stream.
Susan B. Anthony and Sacagawea, both on small $1 coins. Older coins depicted various designs of Lady Liberty, who wasn't a real person.
You will need a long narrow funnel that will fit in the small hole of the transmission dipstick tube.
Shrubby perennial plants with narrow green leaves put up spikes of small flowers that mature into seedpods.
A homophone for "narrow passageway" put into a horizontal position is "aisle" (I'll).
Find someone with a bunch of coins and have them put them in for you.
iron was added to the copper coins somewhere in the 1990.
This is the guided set of wire and tube that you pass through your radial artery or the femoral artery to the opening of the coronary arteries to inject the dye to see the coronary arteries. You can dilate the narrow coronary arteries as well as put the stent there.
yes
It's not a question of opening size but a question of loading over the opening. No load, no lintel. If a 12 inch opening is capped with a 16" block, the block is the lintel. If an opening is between wall studs there is little need for anything that would be called a lintel. Anouther name for a lintel is a header. There is usually some kind of header over an opening. A lintel's size and integrity is determined by the load it will support.
Many different countries put their native animals on their coins. In Canada we have the bear, moose and loon.