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Kevin Eastman, co-creator of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, got the idea for the Shredder's armor from large cheese graters which he envisioned on a villainous character's arms to be used as weapons. Originally called "Grate Man", the Shredder is known as the primary antagonist in the TMNT franchise. [5]
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Kenichi makes a story on catching thieves. Kemumaki tries to spoil. Yumeko tells Kenichi to makes story on walking on water. Then He takes help of Hattori. 46 The Skateboard Race! (Mighty Will with Skateboard) (スケートボードは大騒動の巻) Kemumaki tries to show Yumeko and Kenichi about balancing in bamboo stick.
Used as a strainer, grater, or food mill. A tamis has a cylindrical edge, made of metal or wood, that supports a disc of fine metal, nylon, or horsehair mesh. Ingredients are pushed through the mesh. Tin opener: Can opener: To open tins or cans Designs vary considerably; the earliest tin openers were knives, adapted to open a tin as easily as ...
However, this time Shredder has become Cyber Shredder, half-man, and half-machine. This form of Shredder possessed deadly kick moves and energy ball attacks, as well as being the only boss in the game with two life meters, as the meter instantly refills after it is drained the first time.
[8] He promptly reversed himself and exited the country after hearing this and first-hand accounts of Saddam's shredding machine: "Their tales of slow torture and killing made me ill, such as people put in a huge shredder for plastic products, feet first so they could hear their screams as bodies got chewed up from foot to head."
Shredder (software), a chess program developed by Stefan Meyer-Kahlen; Shredding (data remanence), overwriting storage media with new data to erase it; Shredding (disassembling genomic data), in bioinformatics; Shredder, the alpha build of Mozilla Thunderbird
The Microplane wood rasp, a sleek stainless steel surform rasp first marketed as a woodworking tool and known generically as a microplane, recently became popular as a kitchen utensil for, among other uses, grating cheese (see Zester). An early mention of using a Microplane "rasp-like grater" in the kitchen was a cookbook published in 1999. [22]