(1) It turned its hideous head that looked like a rounded cone , with the snout being the pointy end and the round side being in back.
(2) Starting from the corner opposite the Velcro, roll paper around flower to form a cone (make sure bottom is snug).
(3) The summit cone of Ben More is magnetic and compass readings can be misleading.
(4) Flying into Guatemala City before dawn, I saw a volcano on fire, glowing lava streaming down its cone , reddening the darkness.
(5) When magma moves beneath a volcano, such as when the magma chamber fills prior to an eruption, there is swelling of the volcanic cone above.
(6) Magnus has large, warm purple flowers with an orange cone on strong stems about 90 cm tall and has a very long flowering period from July to October.
(7) Even steam emanating from a volcanic cone is newsworthy.
(8) After the tiles were coated, they were loaded into the kilns and fired to cone 5.
(9) With this interpretation, the entire axis of ovuliferous Cordaianthus can be modified without major rearrangement into the conifer seed cone .
(10) A cone of acrylic yarn
(11) The engines are cross-coupled so that each propeller is run by two diesel engines through clutch and cone belt transmission gears.
(12) If the planes pass through the vertex of the cone , the conics are said to be degenerate, otherwise they are not.
(13) The scales of the cone are thin, obovate and have rounded edges.
(14) He will construct a snake of leaves that flows down a river, a cone of bleached wood that will float away on the tide, a bracken sculpture that is broken by the wind.
(16) The dramatic hollow cone projecting from the front of the headdress is understood as a beehive.
(17) After shaping a piece of paper into a cone , allowing him to safely drink some water, he devised the first paper cup.
(18) At the center of the tableau was the volcano's cone and its steaming crater.
(19) The crystal clear cone just simply melted away, disappeared.
(20) This is a living reef resting on an extinct volcano cone which comes up about three kilometres (two miles) from the ocean floor.