The painted wood was charring, burning, sinking slowly in and the last Stars and Stripes flying in the sun was gradually fading in the heat. |
|
The edges burned first, immediately charring at the edges and then working its way inward. |
|
The fire started in the front room and quickly engulfed it charring the ceiling, stairwell and door-frames before spreading to the hallway. |
|
He wondered how I cooked them through without charring the outsides to a blackened crust. |
|
Two legs of roast lamb on the bone had been cooked just right, with a little charring on the outside to give that attractive, barbecued taste. |
|
All over his body, he saw a thin, glowing mesh that burned brighter and brighter by the second, burning and charring his flesh. |
|
An orange ribbon of flame is charring its way across more than 20,000 acres near Los Angeles. |
|
Carving single blocks of beech, ash, wild cherry or oak, he darkens the figures' surfaces by lightly charring them, after which he polishes them so that they seem to glow. |
|
The name itself — Char No. 4 — refers to the highest degree of charring such barrels receive before the aging process. |
|
One end of it was hardened by charring in the fire, and was sharpened to a fine point. |
|
By the action of heat, charring removes hydrogen and oxygen from the solid, so that the char is composed primarily of carbon. |
|
The system has been designed to produce minimal sticking, charring, or thermal spread to adjacent tissue. |
|
This recall is being issued in response to customer reports outside Canada of sparking, charring and fires on the plug of the power cord. |
|
Place the corn directly on the grill at a high heat for about 10 minutes, frequently rotating the cobs to prevent them from charring. |
|
Her mother had gone out charring for a few hours a day for long periods. |
|
The petroleum soot is not formed by solid-phase charring of fuel but is produced by recombination and coagulation of aromatic molecules in the gas phase. |
|
Activation without saline may result in charring or damage to the electrodes of the device leading to a decrease in the hemostatic effectiveness of the device. |
|
The charring rate is the linear rate at which wood is converted to char. |
|
The test ends when charring or melting of the surface exceeds a distance of 50 mm in any horizontal direction from the lit cigarette, or 10 minutes after the cigarette has extinguished. |
|
Distil, avoiding entrainment and charring, occasionally agitating the contents of the flask, until the level of distillate is a few millimetres below the calibration mark of the volumetric flask. |
|
|
Fire was useful in tool manufacture, for charring the end of a stick not only helped shape the point by making it easier to scrape but also hardened it, as for a spear point. |
|
Bone char, a porous, black, granular material primarily used for filtration and also as a black pigment, is produced by charring mammal bones. |
|
Aromatic groups integrated in the polymer backbone produce less smoke, likely due to significant charring. |
|
Caramelization and charring can add complexity to a fruit or vegetable's natural flavor. |
|
Do not fill cylinder if unraveling or charring of composite fibers occurs. |
|
Nothing has been found so effectual for preserving water sweet at sea, during long voyages, as charring the insides of the casks well before they are filled. |
|
The cut was probably made before charring, using a sharp tool to cut deep enough for the instrument to pry open one of the locules to get to one of three kernels. |
|
High-density deposits from particular episodes of dehusking and charring suggest further that processing took place on a small scale, probably by individual households. |
|
The Samia Racing Pigeon Club had well respected, experienced Homer man Mario Fomiosa of Charring Cross. |
|