Gallery
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Interior rear-end of the main passenger level on an Airbus A340, showing the rear bulkhead as well as a doorway opening
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Rough Boeing 747 interior airframe
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The fuselage can be short, and seemingly unaerodynamic, as in this Christen Eagle
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Glider fuselage schematic
Read more about this topic: Fuselage
Other articles related to "gallery":
... with Guillermo del Toro Revisiting the Gallery A Look Back Art Gallery The Paintings in "Rod Serling's Night Gallery" NBC TV Promos Season 20 ... April 10, 2012 ...
... His work can be found in the UK at the Castle Museum and Art Gallery in Norwich (well over 2000 pieces), Tate Gallery, the British Museum and Victoria Albert Museum in London, the ...
... The Gallery had long sought expansion into this space and in 1982 a competition was held to find a suitable architect the shortlist included a radical high-tech proposal by Richard Rogers, among ... wing had to include commercial offices as well as public gallery space ... to devote the extension entirely to the Gallery's uses, due to a donation of almost £50 million from Lord Sainsbury and his brothers Simon and Sir Tim Sainsbury ...
... Serling appeared in an art gallery setting and introduced the macabre tales that made up each episode by unveiling paintings (by artist Tom Wright) that depicted the stories ... Night Gallery regularly presented adaptations of classic fantasy tales by authors such as H ... Night Gallery was initially part of a rotating anthology or wheel series called Four in One ...
Famous quotes containing the word gallery:
“I should like to have seen a gallery of coronation beauties, at Westminster Abbey, confronted for a moment by this band of Island girls; their stiffness, formality, and affectation contrasted with the artless vivacity and unconcealed natural graces of these savage maidens. It would be the Venus de Medici placed beside a milliners doll.”
—Herman Melville (18191891)
“I never can pass by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York without thinking of it not as a gallery of living portraits but as a cemetery of tax-deductible wealth.”
—Lewis H. Lapham (b. 1935)
“It doesnt matter that your painting is small. Kopecks are also small, but when a lot are put together they make a ruble. Each painting displayed in a gallery and each good book that makes it into a library, no matter how small they may be, serves a great cause: accretion of the national wealth.”
—Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (18601904)