Asperity
Necessary Roughness - film - was created on 1991-09-27.
Lakota has no noun with the meaning "temper", it exists only in verbal forms:chanksizA = to lose one's temperchanniyAn = to be angrychanzegzeg hinglA = to lose one's temper
Someone's temper cannot really be "stormy". There are no dark clouds, lightning flashes, forceful winds. So stormy temper is a figure of speech.
to make clay easier to shape and heat, potters use something called temper.
Necessary Roughness - 2011 Losing Your Swing 1-8 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:6
A quality of bodies which corrodes or destroys others; also, a harsh or biting sharpness; as, the acrimony of the juices of certain plants., Sharpness or severity, as of language or temper; irritating bitterness of disposition or manners.
sharpness
Temper Temper was created in 1991.
Spongin and spicules are the sponges body support and defence. They both cover a sponge, and if a predator eats it it will be hurt. It will be hard to eat it, because of the sharpness and roughness of the outside. Well at least in the spicules case.
Spongin and spicules are the sponges body support and defence. They both cover a sponge, and if a predator eats it it will be hurt. It will be hard to eat it, because of the sharpness and roughness of the outside. Well at least in the spicules case.
No, I think there is no unit for measuring sharpness.
Relative roughness is a measure of the surface roughness of pipe surfaces. It is the size of the roughness scaled by the diameter of the pipe or duct. Rel Roughness=e/D; where e is the measurement of the surface roughness and D is the diameter of the pipe. It is mainly used for calculating head losses in piping systems.
Asperity refers to a harsh or severe quality, often describing something that is rough or abrasive in texture or manner. It can also denote a certain sharpness or bitterness in tone, attitude, or expression. In a broader sense, it conveys the idea of difficulty or roughness in a situation or interaction.
The Absolute roughness, e, of copper is 1.5 microns The relative roughness is just e/D
No, the word sharpness is a common, abstract, uncountable noun, a word for the quality of a thing.I can't think of a use for the noun sharpness in the possessive form; I don't know what the quality of sharpness could posses. If there is a use for the possessive form, that would be: sharpness's.
The director of Necessary Roughness was Stan Dragoti.
The synonym for roughness is ruggedness or coarseness.