Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A bull staff hooked to a nose ring. A bull pole or bull staff is a wooden or metal pole with a special hook on the end that snaps onto the nose ring. [10] The James Safety First Bull Staff (1919) was a five-foot-long steel tube with a lock hook on the bull's end operated from the handler's end of the pole. [11]
Bullnose trim is used to provide a smooth, rounded edge for countertops, staircase steps, building corners, verandas, or other construction.Masonry units such as bricks, concrete masonry units or structural glazed facing tiles may be ordered from manufacturers with square or bullnosed corners.
Video of a bullroarer being swung to make a noise. A bullroarer consists of a weighted airfoil (a rectangular thin slat of wood about 15 to 60 centimetres (6 to 20 in) long and about 1.2 to 5 centimetres (0.5 to 2 in) wide) attached to a long cord.
Nose ring on a bull. Ring a bull is a pub game. A bull's nose-ring on a length of string is swung in an arc with the aim of hooking onto a bull's horn or hook attached to the wall. The ring must stay on the hook to count as a successful throw.
The Bull Ring, a henge in England; Bull Ring, Wakefield, central point of the Wakefield town centre; Bull Ring, Cirencester, the Roman amphitheatre of Corinium Dobunnorum "Bull ring", a name for training grounds for Allied troops in World War I near Étaples, France (see Étaples mutiny) Nose ring (animal), typically found on bulls
Large-gauge septum piercing Fulani woman with traditional nose ring and mouth tattooThe nasal septum is the cartilaginous dividing wall between the nostrils. Generally, the cartilage itself is not pierced, but rather the small gap between the cartilage and the bottom of the nose (sometimes called the "sweet spot" by piercers), typically at 16g (1.2 mm) although it is often stretched to a ...
The Vector templates below can be used to derive images with, for example, Inkscape. This is the method with the greatest potential. This is the method with the greatest potential. See Human body diagrams/Inkscape tutorial for a basic description in how to do this.
The car got its popular name, Bullnose, from its distinctive round-topped radiator at first called the bullet nose. Most bodies, made by Raworth of Oxford, were of the two-seat open-tourer type. There was also a van version, but the chassis did not allow four-seat bodies to be fitted, as it was not strong enough and too short. [3]