Display

Display may refer to:

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Other articles related to "display":

Gibbeting - Display - Variants
... So that the public display might be prolonged, bodies were sometimes coated in tar and/or bound in chains ... Another example of the cage variation is the gibbet iron, on display at the Atwater Kent Museum in Philadelphia, U.S ... The cage, created in 1781, was intended to be used to display the body of convicted pirate Thomas Wilkinson, so that sailors on passing ships might be warned of ...
Apple IIc - Overview of Features - Improving The IIe
... lowercase characters and work better with an 80-column display, and fixed several bugs from the IIe ROM ... In terms of video, the text display added 32 unique character symbols called “MouseText” which, when placed side by side, could display simplistic ...
Grumman F9F Panther - Aircraft On Display
... F9F-2 Panther, BuNo 123050, is on display at the National Naval Aviation Museum in NAS Pensacola, Florida F9F-2 Panther, BuNo 123072, is under restoration for display at the ... F9F-2 Panther, BuNo 125183, is on display at the Pima Air Space Museum in Tuscon, Arizona ... F9F-5 Panther, BuNo 125183, is on display at the Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum in Titusville, Florida ...
Display - Biology
... 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 Yeast ...
Red Junglefowl - Behavior
... Males make a food-related display called 'tidbitting', performed upon finding food in the presence of a female ... The display is composed of coaxing, cluck-like calls and eye-catching bobbing and twitching motions of the head and neck ... The display usually ends when the hen takes the food item either from the ground or directly from the male’s beak and is associated with ...

Famous quotes related to display:

    I mistrust the satisfaction which makes a display of the possession of Infinity; that is called fatuity in philosophic terms.
    Edgar Quinet (1803–1875)

    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)

    If the dignity as well as the prestige and influence of the United States are not to be wholly sacrificed, we must protect those who, in foreign ports, display the flag or wear the colors of this Government against insult, brutality, and death, inflicted in resentment of the acts of their Government, and not for any fault of their own.
    Benjamin Harrison (1833–1901)

    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: ‘It’s four o’clock ... At five I have my abyss.’
    Colette [Sidonie Gabrielle Colette] (1873–1954)

    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 (1826–1903)