There is no water, no electricity, no kerosene, no propane, no benzine, no security. |
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Alternatively, damp a cloth with kerosene oil and carefully wipe the insects off with it. |
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Still, for smokers to light up, there is the small kerosene lamp, its sooty flame guarded by a snipped cigarette packet. |
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I've decided camping above ground level is a far more reliable option than the usual deterrents of boric powder and kerosene. |
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Do not clean your hands or other skin areas with gasoline, kerosene, mineral spirits, or turpentine. |
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His biblically named accomplice whips up some Old Testament wrath on what sounds like a couple of kerosene cans. |
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The material included utensils, new garments, kerosene stoves, footwear, sanitary kits and mosquito coils. |
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On a dilapidated black-and-white television sits an old kerosene lamp which he lights when a blackout plunges him into darkness. |
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When a steady flame blazed up in the kerosene lantern James had been carrying, Pilate's strong hand shoved Ivan into the cool darkness. |
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Mr. Aiyar has also asked the ministry to exempt domestic cooking gas LPG and kerosene from customs and excise duties. |
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Portable fan-forced air heaters come in models that operate on fuel oil, kerosene or propane gas. |
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The common fuels burned in these appliances are natural or LP gas, fuel oil, kerosene, wood, or coal. |
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Blades should be kept free of pitch with kerosene, fuel oil or mineral spirits. |
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The refined products, to include gasoline, kerosene, diesel and fuel oil, are intended for Indonesian domestic consumption. |
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Both are produced by refining crude oil, but the kerosene fraction of the oil is a little heavier. |
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He was the perfect host, cooking us all potato soup and rice on a kerosene stove. |
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Immediately after weighing the roots were transferred to 250 ml round-bottom flasks, immersed in kerosene and sealed with plastic corks. |
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In addition to treating with insecticides, legs may be dipped in a mixture of two parts raw linseed oil and kerosene. |
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In the wards, children are crowded two and three in a bed in airless rooms, foetid with the smell of kerosene heaters. |
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Keep combustible liquids such as paint thinner, kerosene, charcoal lighter fluid, and turpentine away from heat sources. |
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Appliances such as humidifiers, kerosene and gas heaters, and gas stoves add moisture to the air. |
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Since there is no gas, his cook often has to make dinner using kerosene stoves and a hotplate on the kitchen floor. |
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The cart, disguised as a kerosene peddler's wagon, was suspicious because it had no spigot to dispense fuel. |
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It was cool and dark there, and on a low table by the bed there was already a kerosene lamp burning dully through its dirty chimney. |
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A mechanism used to shed light usually fueled by kerosene, or perhaps whale oil in Poe's day. |
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The next morning Nataraj asked for an advance on his salary to buy rice, and kerosene for the little stove we provide. I gave it to him. |
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He was beaten until he lay writhing helplessly on the ground, whereupon his captors doused his body with kerosene and set it ablaze. |
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Never use gasoline in a kerosene heater because it can cause a fire or an explosion. |
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To reduce the problem of fuel supply in the cave, they turned to less bulky kerosene. |
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At one roadside stall, children filled polythene bags with just enough kerosene to keep the family stove burning for one more evening. |
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There is no duty on kerosene when it is used as heating oil but it can be mixed with diesel to run engines. |
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The price of petrol, diesel and kerosene has gone up four times since February. |
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Higher oil prices have added to the cost of petrol, diesel, kerosene and gas as well as transport. |
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In the land of oil, they have to queue five hours a day to get kerosene or petrol. |
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For those people who use kerosene, the fuel price hike will be a heavy burden. |
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Many pieces of wood, soaked with kerosene made a splendid fire in the barbecue pit. |
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Sales of petrol, kerosene, gas and other petroleum products were suspended. |
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With no duty on kerosene in the north, smugglers are bringing heating oil south by the ton. |
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Soldiers check through bags for any banned goods, including diesel, petrol or kerosene. |
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These herbicides must be applied in an oil-based carrier such as diesel fuel or kerosene. |
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Homes in villages are lit with paraffin wicks in tin cans filled with kerosene, a substance that is both dangerous and expensive. |
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There was wood all around the base and the smell of kerosene was thick in the cold air. |
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I have also heard of vending machines that sell more bizarre products such as dry ice and kerosene, though I am yet to see these myself. |
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Early types of gasoline were produced as a byproduct of the process used to make kerosene fuel for oil lamps. |
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Farmers then visit kiosks to purchase spices, kerosene, soap, vegetables or fish, and salt. |
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Do not use kerosene or fuel oil emulsions as they can cause undesirable flavors in fish. |
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People used kerosene for cooking and lighting, which was dangerous because of the thatched roofs. |
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The refinery is the nation's largest producer of gasoline, kerosene and other refined products. |
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All the other rooms were lit by candles and kerosene, seeing as their building had not been wired with electricity yet. |
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The fumes of the kerosene loosen the dirt, which falls into the cotton wool, leaving the works of the clock clean. |
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By the end of the century, kerosene had become the chief product of American oil refineries. |
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As I glanced towards it, I noticed the soft glow of kerosene lamplight through the two front windows. |
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Oscar's three children grew up knowing nothing of stickball in the streets or kerosene in the hair. |
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With the help of a kerosene oil lamp, they searched for her but all they could find were some of her clothes. |
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At room temperature, kerosene is a thin liquid that evaporates easily and smells slightly sweet. |
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While kerosene was more plentiful than gasoline, it was also a distillate from petroleum and presented the same problem of finite supply. |
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Electricity, kerosene and liquefied petroleum gas are used to power the ovens. |
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Aladdin Mantle Lamps use kerosene and emit 60 candlepower of light without smoke or odor. |
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He smelled like kerosene, Chai tea, and spliff, and incense, and crackling fires. |
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Diesel, a middle distillate like kerosene and heating oil, is easier and cheaper to refine from even sludgy oil. |
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Already exhibiting the characteristic kerosene aromas of the grape, this example is bone dry with a little effervescence. |
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The leased land was mostly barren, there were only nine golf holes laid out, and the clubhouse was a converted farmhouse lit by kerosene lamps. |
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The company will appoint its distributors among the kerosene oil depot, at three per cent commission. |
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There was a stitched netting of spiderwebs in the heavy rafters, gray whorls of them thick with dust, and the musty odor of kerosene from the lamp upon his chiffarobe faintly sharpened the air. |
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One of the coaches was doused with kerosene and petrol and set on fire. |
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The camp has solar panels, revolutionary dry latrines, a whole lot of candlelight and kerosene light, and a mandate to be good to the land and people. |
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The Union government has raised the administered prices of kerosene, liquefied petroleum gas, and aviation turbine fuel while leaving diesel and petrol untouched. |
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Small homes often have only kerosene lamps to provide light, which spew toxins equivalent to two packs of cigarettes a day. |
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Adequate stocks of essential commodities such as rice, maida, wheat, kerosene and matchboxes were kept ready for distribution to people in case of any emergency. |
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The cozy days of lighting the Hofburg Palace with kerosene rather than electricity had come to an abrupt end. |
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Franz Joseph lit the Hofburg Palace with kerosene lamps and viewed the telephone as a nuisance. |
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He awoke to dogs barking and gunshots, he said, and turned on a kerosene lantern to see what was going on. |
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Prior to kerosene lamps, most lamps consisted of whale blubber. |
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In addition to the cramped quarters, the streets remained unpaved, and because gas lines had not yet been installed, the families used kerosene lamps. |
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To avoid having sodium react with oxygen or water vapor in the air, it is usually stored under kerosene, naphtha, or some other organic liquid with which it does not react. |
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If you use an unvented natural gas, propane, or kerosene space heater, all the products of combustion, including water vapor, are exhausted directly into your living space. |
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Even small amounts of gasoline or other volatile fuels or solvents mixed with kerosene can substantially increase the risk of a fire or an explosion. |
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Several cords of wood were stacked under a car-port roof and also they had a large, brick barbecue with a handy, half-gallon of kerosene in a plastic container. |
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It appears that there was a slight leak right from the beginning, just a tiny drip but anyone who's been around kerosene will know that a tiny drip makes an enormous pong. |
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People will be prohibited from purchasing kerosene from other parties. |
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He applied business methods to the handling of human beings who, once they had been dehumanised, could be treated no differently from cargoes of kerosene. |
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Some familiar examples include methane, ethane, propane, and kerosene. |
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To buy a Little Sun lamp for Berhanu she would have to spend three months worth of kerosene money, upfront. |
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Clean jet engines work thermally more efficiently and consume less kerosene. |
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As kerosene lamps gained popularity, the refining industry grew in the area. |
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The first successful oil tanker was Zoroaster, which carried its 242 long tons of kerosene cargo in two iron tanks joined by pipes. |
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It also does not have a wind machine, and most orchards no longer use kerosene filled smudge pots to burn to warm the trees. |
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Toncil, which is used as a bleaching agent in industries, is frequently used by profiteers to make the PDS kerosene colourless. |
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Most of its output was kerosene, of which 55 percent was exported around the world. |
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It is to be tried in the so-called floxed Atlas, with the usual kerosene type fuel. |
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They can withstand hydraulic fluid, kerosene, gasoline, degreasers, brake fluid, alcohols, and detergents. |
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The new guidelines on household fuel combustion cautioned against burning unprocessed coal and kerosene at home. |
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In the 1890s, Standard Oil began marketing kerosene to China's large population of close to 400 million as lamp fuel. |
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The second phase allowed for the construction and test of prototype flight pumps for liquid oxygen and kerosene propellants. |
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Although town gas lighting was available in some cities, kerosene produced a brighter light until the invention of the gas mantle. |
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I read every evening, sometimes late into the night, with the help of kerosene lamps, often secretly, past my bedtime. |
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To clean copperware, dip a cloth in gasoline or kerosene, sprinkle with brick bath or pumice, and polish. |
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The rocket carried 600 tonnes of kerosene, heptyl and amyl which are highly poisonous components of rocket fuel, said the head of the Kazakh space agency, Talgat Musabayev. |
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Biofuels made from starch, sugar and oilseed crops could displace substantial volumes of diesel, kerosene and jet fuel currently produced from fossil oil, IEA said. |
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The program trains the four-legged friends to help investigators pinpoint the location of accelerant residue, such as gasoline, kerosene and lighter fluid. |
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Another treatment includes kerosene flotation for chitinous materials. |
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Fluid coking is a process which converts heavy residual crude into lighter products such as naphtha, kerosene, heating oil, and hydrocarbon gases. |
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The first primary product was kerosene for lamps and heaters. |
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The modern petroleum industry started in 1846 with the discovery of the process of refining kerosene from coal by Nova Scotian Abraham Pineo Gesner. |
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Other commonly used derivatives include kerosene and propane. |
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Jet fuel is a relatively heavy and less volatile petroleum derivative based on kerosene, but certified to strict aviation standards, with additional additives. |
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These different molecules are separated by fractional distillation at an oil refinery to produce gasoline, jet fuel, kerosene, and other hydrocarbons. |
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There was 600 tons of highly toxic heptyl, amyl and kerosene rocket fuels on board, according to Talgat Musabaev, the head of Kazakhstan's space agency. |
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Methods of control are numerous, ranging from destroying habitats, draining breeding places, spraying, treating surface water with kerosene to lighting smudge pots. |
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Use a small amount of Kerosene in a bucket of water for a shiny finish rather than detergent. |
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Kerosene is also used as a fuel for tractors and power generators and as a solvent for garden chemicals such as weedkillers and insecticides. |
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Kerosene has been used to light pyres constructed of coal slag, old tyres and tar-soaked rail sleepers. |
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Kerosene and the rest of the organic mixture's lighter components evaporated, leaving behind the heavier molecules that make up tar and asphalt. |
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Kerosene is volatile, flammable and leaks very easily from containers. |
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Kerosene and diesel oil contribute the most to petroleum subsidy. |
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Kerosene lighting was much more efficient and less expensive than vegetable oils, tallow and whale oil. |
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