0 a structure that is built over a river, road, or railway to allow people and vehicles to cross from one side to the other: --
1 the raised part of a ship on which the captain and other officers stand and from where they control the movement of the ship --
2 the top part of the nose, between the eyes, or (on a pair of glasses) the piece that is supported by the top part of the nose: --
3 a card game for four players who play in pairs --
4 a piece of material that contains one or more artificial teeth and is kept in place by being fastened to the natural teeth --
5 a small piece of wood over which the strings are stretched on a musical instrument such as a guitar or violin --
Such conditions arise from the matching with the solution in thin bridges (56).
If growth is the key, then governments may help both growth and the poor by directing their expenditures to infrastructural projects, especially roads and bridges.
The author here bridges language with speech and communication.
Roads and bridges were built and there is now easier contact between places; outsiders and tourists pass through nowadays.
In such cases the overall visual effect of such a character's appearance along the hashigakari is enhanced by the bridge's quality as a 'movement space'.
Samples are from the tip of the regenerating front of bridges harvested 7 days after section.
In regenerative bridges examined between 7-21 days after transection, there was a wide variation in axon maturation.
Such ionic bridges can occur both out-of-plane, between two surfaces, and in-plane, on a single surface.