Usar "clapper" en una oración
clapper oraciones de ejemplo
clapper
1. The bell above the door at the butcher shop called out as the metal clapper clanged around inside the hollow shell of the bell
2. Olin knelt and looked under the edge of the mouth of the bell to locate the usual impact point of the clapper against the bell housing
3. "When the heavy iron clapper strikes the inner housing of the bell it causes a temporary deformation in the shape of the housing
4. The clapper bends the bell out of shape but the housing metal has springiness and it attempts to return to its original shape
5. In so doing it goes beyond the original position before the clapper struck it
6. "The clapper can temporarily deform the bell rather greatly and in so doing various portions of the bell vibrate at different frequencies, giving forth the bell’s full tonal warmth
7. It is the sound that you hear slowly fading away after the clapper has finished striking and all the other tones have stopped
8. A clapper boy did his job with a wooden info slate and camera began to move
9. But the noise of the voices served like a clapper in little Mrs
10. At mid-day Charles came in; then he went out again; next she took some beef-tea, and towards five o'clock, as the day drew in, the children coming back from school, dragging their wooden shoes along the pavement, knocked the clapper of the shutters with their rulers one after the other
11. The lacquey, aware of comment, shook the lolling clapper of his bell but feebly:
12. Martin and kept her company as the EMS arrived and until Inspector Chi of Homicide and Lieutenant Clapper of the Crime Scene Unit took possession of the scene
13. It was Clapper, calling from the compound
14. Claire and Charlie Clapper walked over to Hanni and had a powwow with him, and then they took over the scene
15. “Well, you took all the fun out of that,” said Clapper
16. CONKLIN AND I stood with Charlie Clapper on the bricks behind the Ellsworth compound watching CSU pack up their gear
17. Charlie Clapper called me at the end of the day, said he’d found no incriminating evidence on the Cecily; no blood, no trace, no bleach, no nothing
18. I had been in that basement with Charlie Clapper
19. I was behind Clapper when he shouted, “Awww, shit
20. Charlie Clapper examined the cistern and after a moment said, “There’s a ladder going down about seven feet and there’s a drain in the bottom of this thing
21. I flipped the switch and Clapper sprayed the inside of the cistern with luminol, then turned on his ALS wand
22. I turned to Clapper, but he had started working the walls, spraying luminol as his assistant followed him with the ALS wand
23. Clapper turned the lights back on and as I looked around, I saw something on one of the shelves that dropped another piece of the puzzle into place
24. Clapper said, “You okay?”
25. CLAIRE WAS IN the basement of number 2, standing with Clapper in front of the chest-type freezer
26. Clapper said, “I’m going to be the first to state the obvious
27. A new sheet went down and Clapper lifted another part out of the freezer, and once again they tagged and bagged
28. Clapper lowered a body part to the sheet
29. Conklin and I were directed to the far right-hand side of the store, where Charlie Clapper, head of our crime lab, was shooting pictures
30. THE DAPPER CHARLIE Clapper was a homicide cop before he became director of forensics, and we were lucky to have him
31. “Textbook example of EMTs—evidence-mangling technicians—at work,” Clapper said
32. Conklin said to Clapper, “You have a picture of the victim?”
33. Clapper and the entire forensic lab at Hunters Point
34. She went on to say, “Clapper thinks she was most likely shot from the passenger seat
35. Charlie Clapper, longtime head of the CSIU, was stooped over the body, lifting a pocket flap with his gloved hand
36. ” Charlie Clapper pointed to the hole in the wall, six feet off the ground, water flowing through it as though it were a fire hose
37. Clapper trudged through the water, past the guys on a tall ladder and under the divers who were inside the tank, pressing something that looked like a piece of neoprene against the hole in the glass
38. “Unless, of course,” Clapper said with a wink, “I’m dreaming
39. He was transferring his notes to the case file when Charlie Clapper called him on his cell phone
40. “The murder weapon is registered to the victim,” Clapper said
41. After I briefed him on what I was calling a crime scene, we walked over to the wreck and Clapper poked his head into the vehicle
42. Clapper said, “Thank you,” and then deftly took the bag from my fingers and sealed it in a glassine envelope
43. And then I got a call from Clapper, head of Forensics
44. Swanson, Vasquez, Conklin, and I were looking over the CSIs’ shoulders when Clapper came over to me and said, “We’ve got more prints than a frame shop
45. Then Clapper nicely told us we were in the way
46. AFTER CHARLIE CLAPPER had shooed us out of his crime scene, Conklin and I returned to our desks in Homicide, where we spent the morning reviewing Narcotics’ footage of the street in front of Wicker House
47. Clapper had reported that the surveillance camera at the back of Wicker House had been shot out and that no hard drive had been found inside the store, not a computer, nothing
48. Clapper is director of the forensics unit at Hunters Point, but before he took over the CSU, he was a homicide cop
49. Clapper said, “Marie was found lying over there by the stove
50. Clapper said, “I’d have to agree with you there