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A decal being attached to a piece of machinery. A decal (/ ˈ d iː k æ l /, US also / d ɪ ˈ k æ l /, CAN / ˈ d ɛ k əl /) [1] or transfer is a plastic, cloth, paper, or ceramic substrate that has printed on it a pattern or image that can be moved to another surface upon contact, usually with the aid of heat or water.
Face of Mankind was a first and third-person massively multiplayer online action role playing game (MMOARPG) set in a futuristic persistent world. The game is played from a variety of points of view. The game is played from a variety of points of view.
Luftwaffe decals displayed the side view of an eagle in flight, also holding a swastika. The SS was both a paramilitary and a political organization, and its black runic initials on a silver-coloured shield (normally applied to the right side of the shell) looked like twin lightning bolts.
Richard Owen Holmes Montgomery [1] was born in Los Angeles [2] on April 3, 1993. [3] His mother was a teacher, [4] [better source needed] and his father was a gaffer. [5] When Montgomery was young, his parents got a divorce, [6] and in 2005, he and his mother moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where he lived from ages 12–21, [2] and also attended college. [7]
Balltze was born on 9 January 2011. [2] He was adopted at the age of one from an emigrating friend, [3] by fashion designer Kathy from Kowloon. [4] Kathy's brother named him after Ramune, a Japanese beverage in which a marble ball inside the bottle is pressed down to let the drink flow. [4]
Pepsiman is based on Pepsi's mascot of the same name, which was created for Pepsi's Japanese branch. [4] The character, whose fictional backstory says he used to be a scientist who transformed into a superhero after coming into contact with "Holy Pepsi", [7] was featured in Japanese Pepsi commercials [4] and in the Japanese version of the video game Fighting Vipers; he became popular in Japan ...
Sid the Science Kid, also known as Jim Henson's Sid the Science Kid, is an American children's computer-animated educational television series produced by The Jim Henson Company in association with PBS affiliate KCET, that aired on PBS Kids from September 1, 2008, to November 15, 2012. [1]