Container in a sentence as a noun

This is true, but there are container formats just as old like . mov that are quite nice to work with.

The entire container for "Latest Stable Kernel" should be the hit point; yes, all of it, including those words. 2.

We also had to make a little container out of folded sheet metal that surrounded an egg. The metal shop teacher piled weights on everyone's in the class until the eggs broke.

And you can bet they are stored in a metal container within fireproof bags and away from combustibles. Yes, LiPo battery cells can self-combust.

This may sound dumb, but maybe the easiest solution is to put a transparent fake water container that never drains. So anyone who is about to pour water would see that the machine already has water.

That said: a modern smart phone is more than just a container you carry on your person. It can provide access to much of the same personal information that a search of your most personal possessions would.

I "see" the transformation of a container as a simple sequence of these operations." That's a higher level of thinking that is faster and yet at the same time more precise than thinking in terms of imperative loops.

Long term, the browser as a full-featured operating system makes more sense than as a mere scriptable document viewer slash plugin container.

It's a big deal that they've gotten IE to the point that it can run in an App-V container, and the result will be a faster development cycle and earlier access to new features in the client, without imposing a huge support matrix on application developers. This could pan out into versioned webview controls and all sorts of things.

The container is open to the air which provides oxygen, and while a fridge is cool, it is does not absolutely prevent degradation of the drug due to heat. I've seen storage recommendations for this drug involving sealed, light opaque containers, kept frozen in an icebox and the admonition that this will only preserve it for a few weeks.

Users would have also needed 1 more layer of organizational abstraction, a "Wave container" to carve out different groups of Waves. In my use-case above we really needed to have a container for each document, with each Wave for each major section. But in the most general case, a "pg" type person could have created a "Hacker News" container, and each submission and comment history would have been the individual Waves.

* The argument was made here in an earlier hearing that the cell phone search occurred as part of an "inventory" search; this is one of the contexts in which cell phones were claimed to be a "container". But the controlling appellate opinion here rejected that interpretation; the police cannot search a cell phone to "inventory" its contents. * But that is a moot point if you are arrested, because the police are explicitly entitled to search your person and your car for evidence if you're arrested. Don't get arrested! Here we have the second "phone-as-container" context: the phone is a container for evidence of crimes.

Container definitions

noun

any object that can be used to hold things (especially a large metal boxlike object of standardized dimensions that can be loaded from one form of transport to another)