A conformation like a bench; a long stretch of flat ground, or a kind of natural terrace, near a lake or river.
To place on a bench or seat of honor.
To sit on a seat of justice.
The surface of an excavated area at some point between the material being mined and the original surface of the ground on which equipment can sit, move, or operate. A working road or base which is below a highwall as found in contour stripping for coal.
The area in the court room where the judge sits.
A ledge that, in open-pit mine and quarries, forms a single level of operation above which minerals or waste materials are excavated from a contiguous bank or bench face. The mineral or waste is removed in successive layers, each of which is a bench, several of which may be in operation simultaneously in different parts of, and at different elevations in, an open-pit mine or quarry.
The horizontal ledge in an excavation or mining operation along which holes are drilled vertically.
While this is a general term for all judges, it also refers to the long high desk upon which judges sit in a courtroom.
A glass worker's bench is most commonly a steel framed long armed chair with a wooden seat that extends beyond the arms on both sides. Below the arms are metal shields to protect the legs of the worker from the heat of the glass. The pipe or punty is placed on the arms and rolled out and back to keep the glass in a smooth round shape while working it. On the extended seat are placed metal tools, which may also hang on nails driven in the edge, and behind the seat are often buckets of water holding blocks and wooden tools. A bench is a personal choice and may be built from wood with steel rails or may be built with sloping arms. I use one that I stand before with the arms at waist level and the tools underneith the arms, having a bad back, I stand all the time rather than standing then sitting. I also find it easier to get around the end of pieces and place the punty. Some workers omit the bench and its arms and work glass on ball bearing rollers.
the seating facilities reserved for players, substitutes, one manager, and not more than two coaches when they are not actively engaged on the playing field. Batboys and/or batgirls are not permitted.
The Judge's seat or the Judge, himself/herself.
The rock or salt that remains after the back is excavated. The cost per unit volume for removing the bench is almost always less than the cost per unit volume for removing the back.
A relatively level step, excavated into a slope on which fill is to be placed. Its purpose is to provide a firm stable contact between the existing material and the new fill which is to be placed.
A small terrace or step like ledge breaking the continuity of a slope.
the raised area where the judge sits in the courtroom. The term "bench" may also be used to refer to the Court in its official capacity.
a terrace of level earth or rock that is raised and norrow and that breaks the continuity of a slope braided river: complex tangle of converging and diverging stream channels separated by sand bars or islands. Characteristic of flood plains where amount of debris is large in relation to discharge .
a long seat for more than one person
the magistrate or judge or judges sitting in court in judicial capacity to compose the court collectively
a long backless seat, typically used for sitting at an outdoor table for casual eating
a simple, often backless device, typically for more than one person to sit in
Flat tracts of land, or terraces, formed by wave action on the shoreline of Lake Bonneville or the Great Salt Lake when the lake level remain constant for a period of time
the collective term for all judges who serve on a particular court.
A long horizontal face or ledge of ore in a stope or working place in an underground mine. In an open pit mine, the horizontal step opened for purposes of mining coal, ore, stone, waste rock, or overburden.
The judge's desk in the courtroom.
A wide ledge midway up a kiva wall that usually extends around at least three-fourths of the structure. In addition to providing the surface on which the roof-support columns ( pilasters) rested, benches were probably also used for storage.
one of the successively lower steps or stages created in mining an open pit ore body under one system of open pit mining.
An apparatus designed to performing exercises in a seated or lying fashion. Many benches are adjustable so that exercises can be performed a wide array of different angles.
The horizontal step or floor along which coal, ore, stone, or overburden is worked or quarried. In tunnel excavation, where a top heading is driven, the bench is the mass of rock left, extending from about the spring line to the bottom of the tunnel.
terrace (level ledge) in the slope of an earthwork
steps formed in quarry by removal of stone following bed joints.
The seat where a judge sits in court.
1. A ledge constructed in a batter or natural slope. 2. The toe, ledge or other feature of a bench mark used as a reference level point.
The large structure, usually raised, where the judge sits and which is located at the front of the courtroom.
1 a collective term for judges; 2 the judges of a court of law.
The seat occupied by the judge. More broadly, the court itself.
bench with two metal rails used to roll blowpipe while shaping glass, most of the glass process occurs here.
The seat occupied by a judge in the courtroom.
1. Shelf of rock surrounded by steep areas. 2. A work surface. 3. An elevator in a mine. 4. A long seating surface.
The place where the judge sits. It also is another word for the court itself.
how the judge is sometimes referred to as in "the bench;" also where the judge sits during the proceedings.
A strip of relatively level earth or rock breaking the continuity of a slope. Usually separated by a rock scarp. Inside refers to the upper slope component. Outside refers to the lower slope component above the scarp.
where the judge sits during court proceedings; the term is often used for referring to the judge.
A long seat that can seat at least two people. Benches can be made from any material from wood to concrete. Find an entryway bench or bedroom bench.
The name for the judges or magistrates in a court
The group of judges appointed to a particular Court
The area of a courtroom where the judge sits while court is in session.
Where the glass blower sits to perform various glass blowing tasks. It may look like a short metal park bench with insulated sheet metal and high rails on each end. The glass blower sits in the bench and rests the blowpipe just off their lap with the ends resting on the rails. With the glass attached to the end of the blowpipe, the glass blower can then roll the blowpipe back and forth along the rails, maintaining centrifugal force so the soft hot glass doesn't fall of the blowpipe.
Your Pokémon that are in play but aren't actively fighting sit here. They're ready to come out and fight if the Active Pokémon retreats or is Knocked Out.
Area where the judge or magistrate sits in court.
Distrust debtors and confidants if you dream of sitting on one. If you see others doing so, happy reunions between friends who have been separated through misunderstandings are suggested.
The total number of judges composing the court collectively.
A judge in court session.
A bench is a piece of furniture, which mostly offers several persons seating. As a rule, benches are made of wood, but one can also find stone benches and benches made of synthetic materials. Many benches have arm rests.
A Bench can be a metonymy, served from the sitting bench (furniture), not unlike some uses of chair and seat, for certain groups of people metonymically associated with certain seatings.