I'm just guessing here but I think it migh be... let's say... A BOY HANGING ON A WALL! Just an idea though.
The fatal bellman was a night watchman who rang a bell to call a prisoner to his hanging.
A Pug
Unlucky, daisied, apple gone bad, screwed, etc
the only ones i know are Call it Courage and The Boy Who Was Afraid
The better you can mount a flat screen TV, the better for your TV. Hitting the wall studs is always a preferred choice. Just hanging a set through the dry wall or plaster is inviting a catastrophe later. ---- NO. The wall mount TV bracket does not need to be centered on a stud. Wall mount TV brackets are designed to allow you to install the TV just about anywhere on the wall of your choice. There are many mounting holes on these brackets so even if your bracket is not centered with a stud, you should still be able to hit a stud or two with the holes provided on your mount. If you live in the Connecticut area, Streamline Home Theaters can properly mount your tv bracket and conceil all your wires inside the wall at a very reasonable price check out their website for details www.streamlinehdstore.com
you would call it a normal fault because the hanging wall goes down and the foot wall goes up and over the hanging wall.
There were 10 green bottles hanging on the wall.
Hanging Wall
reverse fault. but that is when the foot wall moves down, the hanging wall moves up. in a strike-slip fault, they slide past each other, the foot wall and hanging wall are not there because it has to be like this to be a reverse or normal fault: hanging wall ----------foot wall ----------- in this diagram, the foot wall has moved down making the hanging wall move up to form a reverse fault. remember this on tests: the hanging wall is always above the fault line: /hanging wall above foot wall below / /
because the dry wall isn't suposesd to go all the way to the ground
no
ar·ras (rs) n. pl. arras1. A wall hanging; a tapestry.2. A curtain or wall hanging, especially one of Flemish origin.
thrust
In a normal fault, the hanging wall moves downward relative to the footwall, creating extensional forces. In a reverse fault, the hanging wall moves upward relative to the footwall, generating compressional forces.
The location on the surface of the earth immediately above the origin of a fault is called the "epicenter."
In a normal fault, the hanging wall moves down relative to the foot wall.
wall hanging is a beautiful craft which only some people can do like me