Yes, the metal detectors have been removed from the premises.
Impeachment is the name for the formal levying of charges against a President by the House of Representatives. An impeached President is then tried by the Senate and if 2/3 of the senators find him guilty, he is removed from office. No President has ever been removed from office by the Senate.
It seems there may have been a typo. If you meant "chisels," they are sharp tools with a pointed end used for cutting or shaping hard materials like wood, stone, or metal. Chisels come in various shapes and sizes for different types of work.
Chile is known for mining copper, with the country being the world's largest producer of the metal. In addition to copper, Chile also mines other minerals such as lithium, iodine, molybdenum, and nitrates. The mining industry plays a significant role in the country's economy.
As of 2021, a total of 15 senators have been expelled from the United States Senate.
Real communism has never been successfully implemented in any country. Some argue that true communism has never been tried due to various factors such as corruption, power struggles, and economic challenges.
Airport metal detectors are quite sensitive to metals, this includes metal implants that may have been placed inside your body. Belt buckles, key chains, and steel-toed shoes may set off these sensitive metal detectors. Many commonly used orthopedic implants may also set off the metal detectors.
Metal detectors have been a staple of airport security for decades. These tall, boxy metal detectors are meant to be walked through and, theoretically, they will detect any metal objects that pass through them. However, if this was the case, then there wouldn't be any need for the hand-held metal detectors that travel authority agents and security guards usually have. Knowing how the larger metal detectors work, and their failings, can help take the confusion out of any misunderstanding.
It means that the air pressure that sealed the can - can not be removed
I think you mean premises. Premises has several meanings. For example, you could say,"Sandra was removed from the premises," which means that Sandra was asked to leave the property where she had previously been. Premises can also means a set of assumptions or suppositions, as in "The premises underlying the theory of evolution include the ideas that all life is interrelated and that all species are descended from a common ancestor." If you mean promises, then you are referring to a commitment to do something.
Scintillation detectors have been used to detect gamma rays aboard many space missions. They have been used to observe sources of cosmic gamma rays.
After what happened in the school in Connecticut, there has been a lot of talk about putting more metal detector in schools to prevent things like that from happening again. It will most likely take time to actually get it in the majority of schools, but over a period of time there will be more and more schools with metal detectors and at least one officer on duty at all times inside the schools, which is now a mandatory thing in a lot of states.
Americium has been used in smoke detectors since the 1950s. Its radioactive properties make it ideal for ionizing smoke particles in the detector, allowing it to quickly detect smoke and trigger the alarm.
Fixtures which have been built into the premises - like cabinets - are leasehold improvements that become part of the structure and cannot be removed in eviction.
A barometer measures air pressure using a metal chamber from which some air has been removed. The most common type is the mercury barometer, where the air pressure pushes down on a pool of mercury in a glass tube to indicate atmospheric pressure.
For a long time, that was the only means available to them. It's only been comparatively recently that we've had instruments able to detect and measure radio waves from space, or ways to hoist infra-red detectors, ultraviolet detectors, x-ray detectors, and gamma ray detectors up above the atmosphere.
The correct spelling is premises.One example sentence for you is: We will have to close the premises.Another example sentence is: You have been asked to leave our premises twice now.
An argument is valid if the conclusion logically follows from the premises. In other words, if the premises are true, the conclusion must also be true. Validity is not concerned with the truth of the premises or conclusion, only the logical relationship between them.