Sentences with phrase «glass of ice water by»

Not exact matches

But they also apparently have advanced internal «rumble» haptics, which Nintendo demonstrated by suggesting you'd be able to distinguish between the feel of ice tumbling in a glass (by shaking the Joy - Con), or the altogether different vibrations of someone pouring water into it.
It is too long to quote in full here, but one has only to think of a few of the powerful and particular images that situate the joy of the «swinger of birches» within the real and fallen world: the ice like broken glass, the trees bent by weather, the face that «burns and tickles with the cobwebs / Broken across it,» and the eye watering «From a twig's having lashed across it open.»
Plus, drinking an ice cold glass of water burns 50 calories by itself.
In Noémie Goudal's large scale photograph Cascade (waterfall), a plastic sheet replaces the pouring water; Tania Kovats» glass and water sculpture Where Seas Meet is made with sea water from three places around the world where seas visibly meet; in David Buckland's photographs of Ice Texts, words of warning are projected on to icebergs; Susan Derges captures the continuous movement of water by immersing photographic paper directly onto rivers or shorelines; and Martin Parr candidly documents the English at the seaside.
News like the disintegration of an ice shelf the size of Rhode Island a month ago conjures a vision that a warming world will lead to doom by drowning — not from melting ice shelves, which like melting ice in a glass do not change water levels, but from melting ice sheets sending their fresh water flowing toward the sea.
That's because ice melting in Greenland and other glaciers is offset by increasing snow pack in Antarctica (melting sea ice has no effect on ocean levels, since the ice floats, for the same reason that ice melting in your glass of water will not cause the glass to overflow).
If this sounds strange, you can verify this by watching a glass of ice water and checking the water level as the ice melts — it will not rise or fall.
You can run this experiment yourself by filling a glass with a mix of ice and water and then making sure it is well mixed.
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