Examples of using Spines in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
at least in part, to the improper use of backpacks on young spines.
The term“non-transplant tissue” refers to body parts, such as heads and spines, which cannot be transplanted into living humans.
these hefty objects are balanced neatly on top of our spines.
but ours don't produce whiskers or penile spines, he said.
Taking this compound is supposed to help promote the repair of the worn articular cartilage in our spines- at least according to marketing claims.
week we clean up our houses and brutally torture our spines.
It's a butcherbird. This little songbird uses the spines as a butcher uses his hook… to hold its prey as it dismembers it.
Those who endure this torture for a long time have completely broken spines, and they die in agonizing pain.
Sea urchins are covered in calcium-filled spines that warn predators of danger.
The spines are gone when they are no longer protruding from the skin, and there are no black
She shaded rows of scales and spines, and smiled at how the creature seemed to come to life a fraction more with each new detail.
It has thirteen sharp dorsal spines on its back, which each have extremely toxic venom.
So, guide Kenny with caution because their sharp spines and strong tentacles can hurt him.
The spines on the claws of H. americanus are red or red-tipped,
On the other hand, the white Crappie looks like the black Crappie excepting that it has 5 to 6 dorsal spines unlike the black Crappie that has 7 to 8 spines.
I would been interested in and obsessed with over the years is spines and skeletons, having collected a couple of hundred.
These are larger and not as closely packed as the spines nearer the bottom of the tongue.
If the first vinegar soak does not remove the spines, a person should continue applying vinegar compresses several times a day until the spines are gone.
One reason would be to protect the documents themselves from flat-bed scanners that might damage the spines and bindings of books.
Kadiakensis, from which it can be distinguished by the arrangement of spines on the telson.