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Drawing of a typical soccer ball. See image:Soccerball shade.svg for a shaded version. This file is from the Open Clip Art Library , which released it explicitly into the public domain ( see here ) .
English: In this image, Newton's Laws of Motion are shown throughout common occurrences of a soccer match. In the first law, the ball is influenced by the wind, an unbalanced force, causing it to roll. In the second law, the ball is being kicked causing its acceleration to be dependent on the mass of the soccer ball and the net force of the kick.
This image or media file is available on the Wikimedia Commons as File:Soccer ball.svg, where categories and captions may be viewed. While the license of this file may be compliant with the Wikimedia Commons, an editor has requested that the local copy be kept too.
3 sided football workshop, at the 1st Intergalactic Conference of the Association of Autonomous Astronauts, Public Netbase, Vienna, Austria, Summer Solstice, 1997. The first known game of 3SF, played on Friday 28 May 1993, was organized by the London Psychogeographical Association on Glasgow Green as part of the Glasgow Anarchist Summer School.
In geometry, the order-7 truncated triangular tiling, sometimes called the hyperbolic soccerball, [1] is a semiregular tiling of the hyperbolic plane. There are two hexagons and one heptagon on each vertex, forming a pattern similar to a conventional soccer ball (truncated icosahedron) with heptagons in place of pentagons.
For information about usage of the words "football" and "soccer" by country, see football (word). It's worth checking Category:Soccer logos from time to time to see if images are "stuck" there despite it being a redirect; although bots can resolve straightforward cases of being categorised in a redirect, they tend not to cope with ...
Aces around, dix or double pinochles. Score points by trick-taking and also by forming combinations of cards into melds.
The painting depicts a dematerialized soccer player. The athlete's calf is seen in the center of the painting, and portions of other body parts can be seen around it. Due to its use of vibrant hues divided into sections, the painting gives the impression that rays of light are illuminating the subject. [ 1 ]