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The development of orihon began in China but later took on an association with Japanese books, as shown by its current name."The development of alternatives to the roll in China is difficult to date, but it appears that at some time during the Tang period long rolls consisting of sheets of paper pasted together began to be folded alternately one way and the other to produce an effect like a ...
Acid storage tanks inside a brick bund wall. Bunding, also called a bund wall, is a constructed retaining wall around storage "where potentially polluting substances are handled, processed or stored, for the purposes of containing any unintended escape of material from that area until such time as a remedial action can be taken."
Link aggregation between a switch and a server. In computer networking, link aggregation is the combining (aggregating) of multiple network connections in parallel by any of several methods.
In Norse mythology, Gleipnir (Old Norse "open one") [1] is the binding that holds the mighty wolf Fenrir (as attested in chapter 34 of the Prose Edda book Gylfaginning).Its name means "the entangled one" or "the deceiver", and has also been translated as "wolf lock" and "absurd lock".
Synonyms [ edit ] Free-trade zones are referred to as "foreign-trade zones" in the United States (Foreign Trade Zones Act of 1934), [ 5 ] where FTZs provide customs-related advantages as well as exemptions from state and local inventory taxes.
Synonyms; Sphinx excaecata J.E. Smith, 1797 Paonias pavonina Geyer, 1837 Calasymbolus excaecata borealis Clark, 1929 Calasymbolus excaecata pecosensis Cockerell, 1905
An artist's impression of a bounded set (top) and of an unbounded set (bottom). The set at the bottom continues forever towards the right. In mathematical analysis and related areas of mathematics, a set is called bounded if all of its points are within a certain distance of each other.
Binding and loosing is originally a Jewish Mishnaic phrase also mentioned in the New Testament, as well as in the Targum.In usage, to bind and to loose simply means to forbid by an indisputable authority and to permit by an indisputable authority. [1]