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You wind it.
Trevor Graham Baylis invented the wind-up torch.
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Think of any machine that uses a Wind Up motor. E.g., a wind up watch or clock, wind up toys. Then there are rubber band powered air planes.
To roll (a cannabis cigarette) is the meaning to the British term to skin up.
Lever= meaning the action to raise---you can use it to mean get up
water goes up and wind and air keep it up until it gets too heavy
One meaning of "capitalize" is to provide funds for a business. Antonyms for this meaning are "wind up", "bankrupt", or "declare bankruptcy".
As Ireland is on the west of Europe and the edge of the Atlantic Ocean, it gets a lot of wind, particularly along the west coast, so it is ideal for setting up wind turbines. There are many wind turbines around Ireland, with lots more planned.
The character in "The Wind in the Willows" who gets locked up in jail is Toad. Toad's reckless behavior and love for motorcars lead him to numerous conflicts and ultimately to being imprisoned for stealing a car.
A homograph to the word "wind" is "wind." The first "wind" refers to moving air, while the second "wind" is the action of twisting or turning something in a circular motion.
Collect the art untill she gets mad, then wind it up, it takes a while i no.
The wind-up radio was invented by a British man - Trevor Baylis. It is wound up by an integral handle, which winds a mainspring (a larger version of the mainspring found in a watch. The spring slowly unwinds, turning an internal generator - which powers the radio. See related links to Wikipedia pages on the inventor - and the radio.
Well first get a bomb flower or any bomb and once you pick it up throw it on the little wind and when he gets close to the little wind he falls and you just hit him just keep doin that and that is it pretty easy
Wind has more than one meaning (as is quite common in the complex English language). Wind can be moving air; it can also be the twisting process used to store energy in a spring (as for example in a wind-up watch or doll).
There are two different meaning of the word 'wind'. One can be like the wind in the air, but the other can be as in 'to wind up a torch' or annoying someone. Here are three sentences for each: "The wind carries tiny things because it is powerful." "The wind is very strong today so be careful your paper doesn't blow away." "The wind annoys me because it messes up my hair." "James likes to wind up his brother." (James likes to annoy his brother.) "I have to wind my torch up every five minutes." "Wind down the window so that I can speak to that other driver."