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  2. Le Corbusier's Furniture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Le_Corbusier's_Furniture

    LC2 - Grand confort, petit modèle referred as Cushion Baskets (1928) LC3 - Grand confort, grand modèle referred as Cushion Baskets (1928) LC4 - Chaise longue "Long chair" LC5 - Sofa Bed; LC5.F - Canapé; LC6 - Table; LC7 - The Swivel Chair (1928) LC8 - Swivel Stool; LC9 - Bathroom Stool; LC10 P - Rectangular Low Table; LC11 P - Table

  3. Moving sofa problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_sofa_problem

    The Hammersley sofa has area 2.2074 but is not the largest solution Gerver's sofa of area 2.2195 with 18 curve sections A telephone handset, a closer match than a sofa to Gerver's shape. A lower bound on the sofa constant can be proven by finding a specific shape of a high area and a path for moving it through the corner.

  4. The Corner of the Table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Corner_of_the_Table

    This group portrait therefore presents the poets that attended the dinners held at the Vilains Bonshommes, which Edmond Maître had presented to Fantin-Latour. Absent is Albert Mérat, who refused to pose with Rimbaud after an incident that occurred during the dinner of March 2, 1872, when the young poet allegedely interrupted a reading of Jean Aicard and forced the poets to take him out by force.

  5. Glossary of British terms not widely used in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_British_terms...

    In the US, the traditional "hand brake" is more often to be found on a bicycle or motorcycle as opposed to a car as in the UK.); handbrake turn, a stunt where the handbrake is used to lock the rear wheels and the resulting oversteer enables the car to be turned rapidly in a small space (US related: J-turn, bootleg turn, U-turn.) ha'penny

  6. Left corner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Left_corner

    In formal language theory, the left corner of a production rule in a context-free grammar is the left-most symbol on the right side of the rule. [1] For example, in the rule A→Xα, X is the left corner. The left corner table associates to a symbol all possible left corners for that symbol, and the left corners of those symbols, etc. Given the ...