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A structure built to allow animals to cross a road safely. Work area or work zone. See construction area. Wrong-way concurrency A concurrency between two roads with opposite signed directions, e.g. a westbound highway and an eastbound highway. Often, the physical roadbed is actually headed in a totally different cardinal direction.
A shift lever mounted as a bar-end plug. Used with drop bars on road bikes, [14] and on various under- and over-seat bars on recumbent bicycles or tricycles. [15] Baroudeur French term for adventurer. See Breakaway specialist. [16] British Best All-Rounder (BBAR) A season-long time trial competition held in the UK. [17] Bead
Road cycling is the most widespread form of cycling in which cyclists ride on paved roadways. [1] It includes recreational , racing , commuting , and utility cycling . As users of the road, road cyclists are generally expected to obey the same laws as motorists, however there are certain exceptions. [ 2 ]
Kid Activities: 23 Funny Cross the Road Jokes for Kids The Knickerbocker, or The New York Monthly , March 1847, p. 283 Studio Portrait of Middle aged African American Male
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A crossover, crossover SUV, or crossover utility vehicle (CUV) is a type of automobile with an increased ride height that is built on unibody chassis construction shared with passenger cars, as opposed to traditional sport utility vehicles (), which are built on a body-on-frame chassis construction similar to pickup trucks.
Caught inside: When a surfer is paddling out and cannot get past the breaking surf to the safer part of the ocean (the outside) in order to find a wave to ride; Cheater five: See Hang-five/hang ten; Cross-step: Crossing one foot over the other to walk down the board; Drop in: Dropping into (engaging) the wave, most often as part of standing up
The Thin Red Line (1881) by Robert Gibb, depicting the 93rd Regiment of Foot of the British army fighting off Russian cavalry at the Battle of Balaclava in 1854. From British English, an entirely different figure of speech for an act of great courage against impossible order or thinly spread military unit holding firm against attack, or the "thin red line", originates from reports of a red ...