. . . ruined by incredibly irritating music and terrible videography.
Dingey = dankGoodness you lot are wingers. It was lovely in it's own way & such a creative idea. The music fitted the mood, just relax your mind & drift with it
Dam spell checkerDingey = dank
Dinghy = small boat
Winger = football player
Whinger = YBW reader
I have never understood the difference between mindfulness and mindlessness!Goodness you lot are wingers. It was lovely in it's own way & such a creative idea. The music fitted the mood, just relax your mind & drift with it
Dam = structure to hold back waterDam spell checker![]()
The man who invented the spell checker died last week. He won't be mist.Dam spell checker![]()
I'm sure I've seen some of her videos.They could, perhaps, have put a bit more thought into naming this......![]()
I find it difficult to link the track of the Sun during the day with the track over the course of the year...I was surprised that the summer solstice track of the sun down to the horizon (the diagonal on the right hand side) bends outward as it approaches sunset. I'd always imagine the sun's track during the course of the day to be an arch, and that therefore that track would bend the other way.
That reminds me... I need to send some socks out for damnation.Dam = structure to hold back water
Damn = darn it
I was surprised that the summer solstice track of the sun down to the horizon (the diagonal on the right hand side) bends outward as it approaches sunset. I'd always imagine the sun's track during the course of the day to be an arch, and that therefore that track would bend the other way.
Not surprising when you consider the track of the sun in the sky during a day. It rises from the horizon, reaches a maximum altitude around midday, descends during the afternoon and evening until it reaches the horizon at sunset, after which we cannot see it. But it then has a negative altitude, reach a minimum (or maximum value of negative altitude) around midnight then rises back to the horizon at sunrise. In short, the track profile shows a wave pattern and may be regarded as negative cosine wave. The outward curve that you see is because the descending path is starting to level out as it approaches the minimum. This is most obvious in the arctic region where the altitude may never become negative and can also be seen during an overnight flight during June from somewhere near Vancouver to London which follows a great circle route taking it into the polar region. Provided you sit on the port side of the airplane.I was surprised that the summer solstice track of the sun down to the horizon (the diagonal on the right hand side) bends outward as it approaches sunset. I'd always imagine the sun's track during the course of the day to be an arch, and that therefore that track would bend the other way.
Look up Mist in GermanThe man who invented the spell checker died last week. He won't be mist.