Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
A simple wooden wall shelf A wooden shelf with a great number of different hair colours in a hairdresser shop in Germany Floating Shelf & Floating Shelf Bracket installation Diagram. Courtesy of Shelfology® A shelf (pl.: shelves) [1] is a flat, horizontal plane used for items that are displayed or stored in a home, business, store, or
Planks made from a tree that has been cut down at UNN, Enugu Nigeria. Wood sourced from the wood industry in Nigeria undergoes processing within a range of wood processing sectors, encompassing furniture manufacturing, sawmill industries, plywood mills industries, pulp and paper facilities, as well as particleboard mills. As of 2010, workers ...
Buildings and structures in Nigeria by local government area (1 C) Buildings and structures in Nigeria by type (23 C) Lists of buildings and structures in Nigeria (4 C, 15 P)
Fuel wood in Nigeria is used for various purposes due to its availability and affordability. Here are some common uses of fuel wood in Nigeria: Cooking: Fuel wood serves as a primary source of energy for cooking in many households and commercial outlets across Nigeria. It is used in traditional stoves or open fires to prepare meals and heat food.
After ending the analogue CATV transmissions, an (analogue) cable-ready TV or VCR is no longer be able to tune cable channels directly. A customer needs to install a digital cable box or a digital television adapter (which is a very basic kind of digital cable box). Newer TVs, however, often feature digital tuners including digital cable tuners ...
Cable box (electronics) an electronic device that controls cable television in individual homes; Cable box (outside) a box located outside a residence that connects cable television; The Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte, North Carolina is sometimes colloquially referred to as the "cable box." the television set-top box is sometimes referred ...
The union was formed in 1996, when the Nigerian government merged the Nigeria Union of Construction and Civil Engineering Workers with the National Union of Furniture, Fixtures and Woodworkers. Like both its predecessors, it affiliated to the Nigeria Labour Congress, and by 2005 it had 62,000 members. [1] [2]