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The Taste of Rain... Why Kneel (sometimes stylized as The Taste of Rain...Why Kneel [1]) is the only studio album by Deep Puddle Dynamics, a collaboration between Sole, Doseone, Alias, and Slug. It was released on Anticon in 1999. The title of the album comes from a "western haiku" by Jack Kerouac. [2]
A puddle is a small accumulation of liquid, usually water, on a surface. [1] It can form either by pooling in a depression on the surface, or by surface tension upon a flat surface. Puddles are often characterized by murky water or mud due to the disturbance and dissolving of surrounding sediment, primarily due to precipitation .
a deep, broad trench, either dry or filled with water, surrounding and protecting a structure, installation, or town. Mud puddle: Nant: Stream: Wales. [33] Ocean: a major body of salty water that, in totality, covers about 71% of the Earth's surface. Oxbow lake: a U-shaped lake formed when a wide meander from the mainstem of a river is cut off ...
We Ain't Fessin' (Double Quotes) is an EP by Deep Puddle Dynamics and Anticon. It was released on Anticon on February 25, 2002. [4] The EP includes Deep Puddle Dynamics' "More from June" and Anticon's "We Ain't Fessin' (Double Quotes)". The CD version of the EP also includes another song by Anticon, titled "Pitty Party People".
A puddle is a small accumulation of liquid on a surface. Puddle or Puddles may also refer to: Puddle, Cornwall, hamlet in England; Puddle; Puddle (M. C. Escher), a woodcut by M. C. Escher; Weld puddle, a crucial part of the welding process; In rowing, an oval patch of disturbed water indicative of rowing skill; Puddle clay, a type of waterproof ...
The puddle is moved along the path where the weld bead is desired. Usually, more metal is added to the puddle as it is moved along by dipping metal from a welding rod or filler rod into the molten metal puddle. The metal puddle will travel towards where the metal is the hottest. This is accomplished through torch manipulation by the welder.
Vernal pools are so called because they are often, though not necessarily, at their maximum depth in the spring ("vernal" meaning of, relating to, or occurring in the spring). There are many local names for such pools, depending upon the part of the world in which they occur.
The British meaning is based on the idea that the topic will be on the table for only a short time and is there for the purpose of being discussed and voted on; the American meaning is based on the idea of leaving the topic on the table indefinitely and thereby disposing of it, i.e. killing its discussion.