is carving = present continuous verb phrase
verb phrase.
The verb phrase is - is carving = be verb and the present participle of carve
The adjective for pole is polar. It can be used to say two things are polar opposites of one another.
"New fishing pole" is a noun phrase. New is an adjective, fishing is a noun adjunct (gerund or adjective), and pole is a noun.
The compound, proper noun North Pole is a concrete noun, a word for a physical location, a specific point on a map.Note: There are two definitions of the North Pole. One is the north magnetic pole, which is a magnetic phenomenon which changes daily depending on changes under the Earth's crust. The other is is a north terrestrial pole, which is the fixed point that references the top of the Earth. There is no actual 'pole' at either physical location.
The Prime Meridian is a invisible line which runs from the north pole to the south pole.
The subject in the sentence, 'Who first reached the North Pole?' is 'who'.
There is no such thing as a two phase instrument. There is only single phase and three phase. You can only have: single phase/ one pole single phase/ two pole three phase/ three pole
pole=2 slots=24 phase=3 slot/pole/phase =6 (1)
Peter Hamilton.
3 pole would be for 3 phase, 4 pole would be 3 phase & neutral
type 1: single phase tree phase poly phase type 2: rotating armature rotating field type 3: salient pole machine non salient pole machine type 1: single phase tree phase poly phase type 2: rotating armature rotating field type 3: salient pole machine non salient pole machine
Probably
Phase, if you are referring to line, as power line from pole.
3 Phase power is supplied by a 3 pole supply like a breaker. So essentially yes.
3 pole circuit breakers are used for 3 phase lines
It was Me
A Kwakiutl totem pole is a wood carving that Kwakiutl tribe members would carve for spiritual purposes.
A single phase circuit uses a 2 pole breaker if the circuit is 120/240 split phase and the load is connected 240. Both legs are hot, so both need to be protected. This is the normal US/Canada configuration.