Display may refer to:
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Other articles related to "display":
... A head-up display or heads-up display—also known as a HUD—is any transparent display that presents data without requiring users to look away from their usual viewpoints ...
... Display advertising is a type of advertising that typically contains text (i.e ... In periodicals, display advertising can appear on the same page as, or on the page adjacent to, general editorial content ... Display advertisements are not required to contain images, audio, or video Textual advertisements are also used where text may be more appropriate or more effective ...
... Display (zoology), a form of animal behaviour Display (horse) (1923–1944), an American thoroughbred racehorse Display techniques in biochemistry Bacterial display mRNA display Phage display Ribosome display ...
... Canada F2H-4 Banshee, bureau number 126334, is on display at the Naval Museum of Alberta, Calgary ... F2H-4 Banshee, bureau number 126402, is on display at the Shearwater Aviation Museum in Shearwater, Nova Scotia ... F2H-3 Banshee, bureau number 126464, is on display at the Canada Aviation Museum in Ottawa, Ontario ...
... The most famous news ticker display is the "zipper" that circles One Times Square in New York City ... The New York Times erected the first such display in 1928, and now several buildings in midtown Manhattan feature such a display ... A similar display appears on the exterior of the Fox News/News Corporation headquarters in the west extension of Manhattan's Rockefeller Center ...
Famous quotes containing the word display:
“Voluptuaries, consumed by their senses, always begin by flinging themselves with a great display of frenzy into an abyss. But they survive, they come to the surface again. And they develop a routine of the abyss: Its four oclock ... At five I have my abyss.”
—Colette [Sidonie Gabrielle Colette] (18731954)
“Lovers of painting and lovers of music are people who openly display their preference like a delectable ailment that isolates them and makes them proud.”
—Maurice Blanchot (b. 1907)
“In the early forties and fifties almost everybody had about enough to live on, and young ladies dressed well on a hundred dollars a year. The daughters of the richest man in Boston were dressed with scrupulous plainness, and the wife and mother owned one brocade, which did service for several years. Display was considered vulgar. Now, alas! only Queen Victoria dares to go shabby.”
—M. E. W. Sherwood (18261903)