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Wiktionary
lensboards

n. (plural of lensboard English)

hoards

n. (plural of hoard English) vb. (en-third-person singular of: hoard)

manages

vb. (en-third-person singular of: manage)

garagelike

a. Resembling a garage; thus often rough and unfinished

biddable

a. 1 docile, amenable or compliant. 2 (context bridge English) Suitable for bidding.

knock-knees

n. (knock-knee English)

sustenance

n. Something that provides support or nourishment.

hit out

vb. 1 (context idiomatic English) To react viciously (towards someone/something). 2 (context obsolete English) To perform by good luck.

scaritoxins

n. (plural of scaritoxin English)

pervasions

n. (plural of pervasion English)

drone-athon

n. A boring speech or presentation that is perceived being very lengthy.

kneelingly

adv. In a kneeling position.

clip art

n. (context computing English) A set of images, distributed as files with other software, that may be copy and paste into documents or other files.

dholak

n. North Indian hand drum.

lapislazzuli

n. (dated form of lapis lazuli English)

metallurgically

adv. In a metallurgical way.

first in first out

alt. 1 (context accounting English) A method of inventory accounting that values items withdrawn from inventory at the cost of the oldest item assumed to remain in inventory. 2 (context operations English) A policy of serving first what has arrived for service first. n. 1 (context accounting English) A method of inventory accounting that values items withdrawn from inventory at the cost of the oldest item assumed to remain in inventory. 2 (context operations English) A policy of serving first what has arrived for service first.

protomerites

n. (plural of protomerite English)

picramide

n. 2,4,6-trinitroaniline, an explosive compound.

out of gas

a. 1 (&lit out of gas English): lacking fuel. 2 (context idiomatic English) Tired; lacking energy or motivation.

adessive cases

n. (plural of adessive case English)

two-edged

a. 1 (context of an edged weapon etc English) having two cutting edges 2 (context by extension English) having two, often contrasting, meanings or interpretations

toll bridge

n. a bridge at which a toll is charged for passage

polynomial functions

n. (polynomial function English)

push the boat out

vb. (context British idiomatic English) to do something, especially spend money, more extravagantly than usual, particularly for a celebration.

fish gigs

n. (fish gig English)

electorally

adv. 1 In an electoral manner 2 With regard to elections

electronic communication

n. communication which is transferred electronically

gastroparesis

n. (context pathology English) A condition, often a complication of diabetes, characterised by a delayed emptying of the stomach

modernly

adv. 1 In a modern manner. 2 In modern times; recently.

labourer

n. (standard spelling of laborer from=British spelling English)

telephone kiosk

n. (context UK English) A telephone booth

repiningly

adv. With repine or murmuring.

news crawls

n. (news crawl English)

fleeched

vb. (en-past of: fleech)

n.h.

abbr. (context legal English) New Hampshire, as used in case citations.

account of

vb. (context transitive obsolete English) To esteem; to prize; to value.

pedogenesis

n. 1 (context geology English) Process of the formation of soil. 2 (context biology English) larval or preadult reproduction in some insects.

Wikipedia
Samaheej

Samaheej ( Samāhīj) is a village in Bahrain on the northern coast of Muharraq Island. Al Dair village lies to its northwest, while Galali lies to its southeast. It is north of Bahrain International Airport.

Samaheej had a Nestorian Christian presence during its early history, with old foundations of a Nestorian monastery being discovered in the village.

Before the discovery of oil in Bahrain, most of the inhabitants were involved in farming, especially date palms, and fishing.

The name Samahij is from Persian se (three) and mahi (fish) and hence, ‘the three fish’. This name has to do with the geographical form of the area on which this village is situated.

Among the famous people from Samaheej is Abdullah bin Saleh al Samahiji (1675 - 1722), a medieval Islamic scholar, prominent within the Akhbari school of Shiism during the Safavid era.

Preding

Preding is a municipality in the district of Deutschlandsberg in the Austrian state of Styria.

KBHP

KBHP (101.1 FM, "KB101") is an FM radio station licensed by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to serve the community of Bemidji, Minnesota, which is located in northern Minnesota. KBHP plays country music and is owned and operated by Hubbard Broadcasting, Inc. It has its own local news department, and gets statewide news from the Minnesota News Network. The Bemidji studios are located at 502 Beltrami Avenue, downtown Bemidji. It shares a transmitter site with sisters KLLZ-FM and KKZY, near Lake Plantagenet along Highway 9.

KBHP is the local home to the Minnesota Vikings broadcasts, along with its sister station KBUN. A large amount of the broadcasting day is live, from 5:30 am until 10pm each week day.

Hubbard Broadcasting announced on November 13, 2014 that it would purchase the Omni Broadcasting stations, including KBHP. The sale was completed on February 27, 2015, at a purchase price of $8 million for the 16 stations and one translator.

R.I.C.O. (song)

"R.I.C.O." is a song by American hip hop recording artist Meek Mill, released as the third single from his second studio album Dreams Worth More Than Money, on June 29, 2015. The song features fellow rapper, Canadian recording artist Drake. The song was produced by Vinylz, Allen Ritter and Cubeatz. The song's title refers to the " Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations" Act.

Heiheionakeiki

Heiheionakeiki is a Polynesian constellation which mariners used to navigate to Tahiti. It is the Hawaiian word for the Belt and Sword of Orion. As all of Hawaiian Airlines’s new A330s are named for a constellation or star used by the ancient Polynesians for celestial navigation when making their voyages across the Pacific to Hawaii, the airlines has named its seventh Airbus 330 aircraft after the constellation.

Sustenance

Sustenance can refer to any means of subsistence or livelihood.

Neocoenyra

Neocoenyra is an Afrotropical butterfly genus from the subfamily Satyrinae in the family Nymphalidae.

Lillington

Lillington may refer to:

Places:

  • Lillington, Dorset, a hamlet in north west Dorset, England
  • Lillington, Warwickshire, a part of Leamington Spa in Warwickshire, England
  • Lillington, North Carolina, a town in North Carolina in the United States
  • Lillington and Longmoore Gardens, a housing estate in Pimlico, London

Other:

  • The Lillingtons, a punk rock band, with songs like "X-ray Specs" or "I Need Some Brain Damage"
Fnatic

Fnatic (pronounced "fanatic" ; also stylized as fnatic or FNATIC) is a professional eSports organization headquartered in London, United Kingdom. Founded July 23, 2004, the team has players from around the world, across a variety of games, such as Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, League of Legends and Dota 2.

Fnatic's League of Legends team team won the first ever League of Legends World Championship in 2011, and also holds the record for the most League of Legends Championship Series split titles, totalling five of the seven played so far. In the 2015 EU LCS Summer Split they became the first LCS team to finish a split undefeated. Because of their accomplishments Fnatic's LoL team is usually considered the best western team in history.

Fnatic's Counter-Strike team, which has traditionally been located in Sweden, is also considered one of the best of all time, having won three CS:GO Majors and winning many other tournaments in both the CS 1.6 and CS:GO eras. Fnatic is the only CS:GO team to appear in every Major to date.

Fnatic (Dota 2)

The Fnatic Dota 2 division is a division of the professional eSports organisation Fnatic specialising in Dota 2.

Evening grosbeak

The evening grosbeak (Hesperiphona vespertina) is a passerine bird in the finch family Fringillidae found in North America.

Komar

Komar may refer to:

  • Mosquito, in some Slavic languages
  • Komar, Iran (disambiguation), places in Iran
  • Władysław Komar, Polish athlete
  • Sue Palmer-Komar, Canadian racing cyclist
  • Komar and Melamid, Russian graphic artists Vitaly Komar and Alex Melamid
  • Komar, mountain in central Bosnia, near Travnik
  • Komar, Donji Vakuf, village in central Bosnia, between Travnik and Donji Vakuf
  • Komar class missile boat of the USSR
  • RPG-76 Komar is a Polish light one-shot anti-tank grenade launcher that fires an unguided anti-tank rocket propelled grenade
Komar (caste)

Komar is a caste in north-east India that originated from the Domars in 1913.

Mangelia

Mangelia is a large genus of sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Mangeliidae. There are at least 78 described species.

The genus Mangelia used to be defined by a multispiral protoconch, contrary to the genus Mangeliella Bucquoy, Dautzenberg & Dollfus, 1883 which was defined by a paucispiral protoconch. In 2011 the genus Mangeliella has been recognized as a synonym of Mangelia.

Konarzewo-Marcisze

Konarzewo-Marcisze is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Gołymin-Ośrodek, within Ciechanów County, Masovian Voivodeship, in east-central Poland. It lies approximately north of Gołymin-Ośrodek, east of Ciechanów, and north of Warsaw.

Katsukiyo

Katsukiyo (written: 勝静 or 勝喜代) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include:

  • (1823–1889), Japanese daimyō

  • , Japanese Go player

Schickedanz

Schickedanz is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Albert Schickedanz (1846–1915), Austro-Hungarian architect
  • Gustav Schickedanz (1895–1977), German entrepreneur
  • Madeleine Schickedanz (born 1943), German entrepreneur
Clip art

Clip art, in the graphic arts, is pre-made images used to illustrate any medium. Today, clip art is used extensively in both personal and commercial projects, ranging from home-printed greeting cards to commercial candles. Clip art comes in many forms, both electronic and printed. However, most clip art today is created, distributed, and used in an electronic form. Since its inception, clip art has evolved to include a wide variety of content, file formats, illustration styles, and licensing restrictions. Clip art is generally composed exclusively of illustrations (created by hand or by computer software), and does not include stock photography.

Tshila

Sarah Tshila, a.k.a. Tshila is a world-fusion musician from Uganda who first got onto the music scene in 2005 as a member of the pioneering Ugandan hip-hop group, Bataka Squad. She started out as the female MC in the group then later began to explore a solo career as an Afro-Fusion artist.

Dholak

The dholak (, , ; ; in the Netherlands and Suriname and ) is a South Asian two-headed hand-drum.

It may have traditional cotton rope lacing, screw-turnbuckle tensioning or both combined: in the first case steel rings are used for tuning or pegs are twisted inside the laces.

The dholak is mainly a folk instrument, lacking the exact tuning and playing techniques of the tabla or the pakhawaj. The drum is pitched, depending on size, with an interval of perhaps a perfect fourth or perfect fifth between the two heads.

It is related to the larger Punjabi dhol and the smaller dholki.

Warrenbayne

Warrenbayne is a locality in north-eastern Victoria, Australia. The locality, part of the Rural City of Benalla local government area, is north east of the state capital, Melbourne.

Warrenbayne was home to a state primary school, Warrenbayne Primary School, until its closure in 2008 due to declining enrolments.

Ōshima

Ōshima, Oshima, Ooshima or Ohshima may refer to:

Ōshima (Ehime)

is an island in the Seto Inland Sea that lies between the larger islands of Honshū and Shikoku in Japan. It is part of Ehime Prefecture and is governed by the city of Imabari.

The island is part of the Shimanami Kaidō, an expressway that runs through a chain of islands between Honshū's Hiroshima Prefecture and Shikoku's Ehime Prefecture. The islands serves as one of the anchor points of two majors bridges along the expressway: The Hakata-Ōshima Bridge and the Kurushima-Kaikyō Bridge.

Category:Islands of Ehime Prefecture Category:Islands of the Seto Inland Sea

Oshima (Hokkaido)

is an uninhabited island in the Sea of Japan, to the west from Matsumae town and therefore the westernmost point in Hokkaidō. It is part of the town of Matsumae in Matsumae District, Oshima Subprefecture in Hokkaidō, Japan. To distinguish Ōshima from other islands with the same name, it is sometimes known as or .

At , Ōshima is the largest uninhabited island under Japanese sovereignty. The island is a double caldera with a scoria hill rising in the middle. It is the peak of two overlapping stratovolcanoes and their associated calderas, Mount Higashi and Mount Nishi. The highest peak, at , is part of a triple volcano. The peak rises close to from the sea floor. The island consists of mafic alkali and non-alkali volcanic rock, less than 18,000 years old.

On the south side of the island at , there are a lighthouse and a heliport operated by Japan Coast Guard.

Because of volcanic activity and nature conservation, landing on the island requires the approval of the Agency for Cultural Affairs.

Puniya

Puniya (also Poonia or Punia) is a clan or gotra of Jats in Rajasthan, Haryana, Punjab and Uttar Pradesh in India.

People with this surname include:

  • Mohini Raaj Puniya, Indian model
  • Surendra Poonia, Indian sportsman
  • Krishna Poonia, Indian discus thrower
  • Navdeep Poonia, Scottish cricket player
  • Jai Narayan Poonia, Indian politician
  • Poonam Poonia, Indian cricketer

Category:Jat clans of Rajasthan Category:Jat clans of Haryana Category:Jat clans of Uttar Pradesh

Out of Gas

"Out of Gas" is the eighth episode of the science fiction television series Firefly created by Joss Whedon. It differs stylistically from the rest of the series, in that it tells its story alternately in three timeframes: events in the present, events in the near-past that led to the present, and events in the past that led to the formation of Serenity's core crew.

After Serenity suffers a catastrophe that leaves her crew with only hours of oxygen, flashbacks show how Mal and Zoe acquired Serenity and assembled their crew.

Out of Gas (video game)

Out of Gas is a 1992 futuristic action video game developed by Realtime Associates exclusively for the Game Boy. This game was mentioned in an issue of Nintendo Power and appears to have elements of the classic video game Asteroids.

Out of Gas (disambiguation)

" Out of Gas" is the eighth episode of science-fiction television series Firefly.

Out of Gas may also refer to:

  • Out of Gas: The End of the Age of Oil, a book by David Goodstein
  • Out of Gas (video game), a Game Boy action game developed by Realtime Associates
  • "Out of Gas" (song), a song by Modest Mouse
Nuclear Device (The Wizard of Aus)

"Nuclear Device (The Wizard of Aus)" is a 1979 single by British band The Stranglers. The second single from their album The Raven, it peaked at No. 36 on the UK Singles Chart.

Hugh Cornwell stated in Song by Song that the song was written about the then Premier of Queensland, Joh Bjelke-Petersen. It also makes references to gerrymandering, and genetic mutation in animals.

Bianouan

Bianouan is a town in south-eastern Ivory Coast. It is a sub-prefecture of Aboisso Department in Sud-Comoé Region, Comoé District.

Bianouan was a commune until March 2012, when it became one of 1126 communes nationwide that were abolished.

Toll bridge

A toll bridge is a bridge over which traffic may pass upon payment of a toll, or fee.

Virginis

Virginis may refer to :

SoftMaker

SoftMaker Software GmbH is a software company that produces office software and is located in Nuremberg, Germany. SoftMaker was founded in 1989 by Martin Kotulla. In 1991, it also added digital fonts to its offerings. Best known in Germany and the EU, SoftMaker is slowly pursuing the North American market, where it faces stiff competition from both free and commercial competitors.

Students, teachers, schools, and universities can purchase SoftMaker Office for a lower price through the "Schulen ans Netz" ("get schools onto the net") initiative, part of SoftMaker's academic sales program. Additionally, a free version named FreeOffice is available.

To promote its digital font sales, SoftMaker publishes one font each month free for download from its FreeFont web site.

Caveira

Caveira is the smallest civil parish by area on the island of Flores, located within the municipality of Santa Cruz das Flores, in the Azorean archipelago. The population in 2011 was 77, in an area of 3.28 km². It is located 5 kilometers south of Santa Cruz das Flores, the municipal capital, in an area primarily concentrating on agriculture.

Köttsoppa

Köttsoppa (meat soup) is a clear meat and root vegetable soup eaten in Sweden. The meat, and the bones supplying the broth, is beef, frequently chuck, or sometimes pork, reindeer or elk. Root vegetables commonly used include carrot, potato, celeriac, parsnip, turnip and swede. Leek, peppercorns and bay leaves are often added for seasoning. Meat and vegetables are cut to roughly die sized bits and boiled soft.

Köttsoppa is sometimes eaten with klimp – simple dumplings the size of ping pong balls made of wheat, milk and egg.

HVY

HVY may refer to:

  • HeavyLift Cargo Airlines, a defunct Australian airline
  • Helenium virus Y
Hornowo

Hornowo is a village in the administrative district of Gmina Dziadkowice, within Siemiatycze County, Podlaskie Voivodeship, in north-eastern Poland. It lies approximately north-east of Siemiatycze and south of the regional capital Białystok.

Patraus

Patraus ( Greek Πατράος; 340 BC – 315 BC) was an ancient Paeonian king. He seems to have been Ariston's brother who served as a general to Alexander the Great.

Shootash

Shootash is a small village and civil parish in the Test Valley district of Hampshire, England. Its nearest town is Romsey, which lies approximately 2.5 miles (4.1 km) south-east from the village.

Category:Villages in Hampshire Category:Test Valley

Kagwongo

Kagwongo is a settlement in Kenya's Central Province.

Gastroparesis

Gastroparesis (GP) (gastro- from Ancient Greek γαστήρ gaster, "stomach" and πάρεσις -paresis, "partial paralysis"), also called delayed gastric emptying, is a medical condition consisting of a paresis (partial paralysis) of the stomach, resulting in food remaining in the stomach for an abnormally long time. Normally, the stomach contracts to move food down into the small intestine for additional digestion. The vagus nerve controls these contractions. Gastroparesis may occur when the vagus nerve is damaged and the muscles of the stomach and intestines do not properly function. Food then moves slowly or stops moving through the digestive tract.

Zagóry

Zagóry may refer to:

  • Zagóry, Lesser Poland Voivodeship (south Poland)
  • Zagóry, Łódź Voivodeship (central Poland)
  • Zagóry, Polish name for Žagarė, Lithuania
Ogna

Ogna is a village in Hå municipality in Rogaland county, Norway. The village is located immediately north of the village of Sirevåg on the shores of the Ognaelva river. The village was the administrative centre of the historic municipality of Ogna. The village is the site of Ogna Station, a railway station along the Sørlandsbanen railway.

The village has a population (2015) of 360, giving the village a population density of .

Ogna is the site of the centuries-old Ogna Church. The little church, which dates back to the Middle Ages, was restored and added to after a fire in 1991. It is often open in the summer for visitors. Ogna also has beautiful sand beaches, and salmon fishing is very popular in the nearby river. Norwegian County Road 44, which also forms the tourist route known as the North Sea Road, passes through the village.

Ogna (municipality)

Ogna is a former municipality in Rogaland county, Norway. The municipality existed from 1839 until its dissolution in 1964. The municipality encompassed roughly the southern third of the present-day municipality of Hå. The administrative centre of the municipality was the village of Ogna where the Ogna Church is located.

News analyst

A news analyst examines, analyses and interprets broadcast news received from various sources. Sometimes also called newscasters or news anchor or Broadcast News Analyst. News analysts write commentaries, columns, or scripts. They coordinate and sometimes serve as an anchor on news broadcast programs. They develop perspectives about news subjects through research, interviews, observation, and experience.

Madiun

Madiun is a city in the western part of East Java, known for its agricultural center. It was formerly (until 2010) the capital of the Madiun Regency, but is now administratively separated from the regency.

Madiun, located 169 km south west of Surabaya, covers an area of 33.92 sq. km, and had a population of 170,964 at the 2010 Census; the latest official estimate (as at 2014) is 175,767. This town is an average of 63 metres above sea level and lies on the Madiun River, a tributary of the Bengawan Solo River. It is surrounded by a number of mountains, including Mount Wilis (2,169 m) to the east, to the south the Kapur Selatan range (500–1000 m) and to the west Mount Lawu (3,285 m). Madiun has an average temperature of 20-35 degrees Celsius.

YBG

YBG may refer to:

  • The Yash Birla Group of companies
  • The IATA code for Canadian Forces Base Bagotville
  • Young, Black en Gifted, an album by Sunny Boy
  • Ysgol Bro Gwaun, a secondary school in the town of Fishguard in north Pembrokeshire
Fervaches

Fervaches is a former commune in the Manche department in north-western France. On 1 January 2016, it was merged into the new commune of Tessy-Bocage.

Morlocks (comics)

The Morlocks are a group of mutant characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The characters are usually depicted as being associated with the X-Men in the Marvel Universe. Created by writer Chris Claremont and artist Paul Smith, they were named after the subterranean race of the same name in H. G. Wells' novel The Time Machine. They first appeared as a group in Uncanny X-Men #169 (May 1983). (Caliban appeared prior to that (in Uncanny X-Men #148), but he was not yet a member of the Morlocks.)

Due to a series of tragedies, the original Morlocks no longer reside in subterranean New York City (except Marrow, who was one of the original Morlocks as a child), although a violent splinter cell Gene Nation and a comparable group called Those Who Live in Darkness have emerged. Similar groups, called Morlocks by readers and/or the X-Men themselves, have appeared under Chicago and London.

The Morlocks appeared occasionally in the 1990s X-Men animated series and its successor X-Men: Evolution.

Morlocks (band)

Morlocks is an alternative/industrial rock band formed in Gothenburg, Sweden in the early 90's by J.Strauss and Н.М.Д.

Dimethylheptylpyran

Dimethylheptylpyran (DMHP, 3-(1,2-dimethylheptyl)-Δ-THC, 1,2-dimethylheptyl-ΔTHC, A-40824, EA-1476) is a synthetic analogue of THC, which was invented in 1949 during attempts to elucidate the structure of Δ-THC, one of the active components of cannabis. DMHP is a pale yellow, viscous oil which is insoluble in water, but dissolves in alcohol or non-polar solvents.

Greco-Roman wrestling

Greco-Roman ( US) or Graeco-Roman ( UK) wrestling is a style of wrestling that is practiced worldwide. It was contested at the first modern Olympic Games in 1896 and has been included in every edition of the summer Olympics held since 1908. Two wrestlers are scored for their performance in two three-minute periods, which can be terminated early by a pin (or fall). This style of wrestling forbids holds below the waist; this is the major difference from freestyle wrestling, the other form of wrestling at the Olympics. This restriction results in an emphasis on throws because a wrestler cannot use trips to take an opponent to the ground, or avoid throws by hooking or grabbing the opponent's leg.

Arm drags, bear hugs, and headlocks, which can be found in Freestyle, have even greater prominence in Greco-Roman. In particular, a throw known as a suplex is used, in which the offensive wrestler lifts his opponent in a high arch while falling backward on his own neck to a bridge in order to bring his opponent's shoulders down to the mat. Even on the mat, a Greco-Roman wrestler must still find several ways to turn his opponent's shoulders to the mat for a fall without legs, including techniques known as the bodylock and the gut-wrench.

According to United World Wrestling (UWW; formerly known as the International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles, or FILA), Greco-Roman wrestling is one of the six main forms of amateur competitive wrestling practised internationally today. The other five forms are Freestyle wrestling, Grappling/ Submission wrestling, Beach wrestling, Pankration athlima, Alysh/Belt wrestling and Traditional/ Folk wrestling. In February 2013, the International Olympic Committee voted to exclude freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestling from the 2020 Summer Olympic Games, but shortlisted it to be considered for reinclusion. In September 2013, at the 125th Session of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), wrestling was elected as an additional sport.

Trionychia

Trionychia is a superfamily of turtles which encompasses the species that are commonly referred to as softshelled turtles as well as some others. They are found throughout the temperate regions of the world.

It traditionally consisted of a single family, two subfamilies, and 14 genera. However, more recently it was realized that the supposed " Kinosternoidea" are actually early offshoots of the Trionychoidea and not as closely related among each other as it was believed. These two families lack the characteristic trionychoid apomorphies, but possess some highly derived characters of their own, which they moreover evolved independently from each other.

Pedogenesis

Pedogenesis (from the Greek pedo-, or pedon, meaning 'soil, earth,' and genesis, meaning 'origin, birth') (also termed soil development, soil evolution, soil formation, and soil genesis) is the process of soil formation as regulated by the effects of place, environment, and history. Biogeochemical processes act to both create and destroy order ( anisotropy) within soils. These alterations lead to the development of layers, termed soil horizons, distinguished by differences in color, structure, texture, and chemistry. These features occur in patterns of soil type distribution, forming in response to differences in soil forming factors.

Pedogenesis is studied as a branch of pedology, the study of soil in its natural environment. Other branches of pedology are the study of soil morphology, and soil classification. The study of pedogenesis is important to understanding soil distribution patterns in current ( soil geography) and past ( paleopedology) geologic periods.

Usage examples of "pedogenesis".

He thinks he will begin every account of this terrible afternoon (it has not occurred to him that he may not survive the terrible afternoon, at least not yet) by saying I just got home from work.

I said we didn't know, no one had been in there on account of the MSHA regulations.

There was a guy last week complaining on account of his dog got shot by one of them automatic weapons.