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| - Still Life is the tenth episode in season six of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
- "Still Life" was the 48th episode of The Dead Zone and the fourth episode of the fourth season, airing on USA Network on 10 July 2005.
- Still Life was a song from Ryan Farish that played back in July 2008 Playlist (daytime on TWC.
- Aah. Looking at this œuvre d'une beauté brings me back to the days when I myself was an art critic. Still life, in particular, was my favorite type of painting. Of course, such elegance is hard to find these days, what with this idiotic surreal art fad and whatnot. How does cutting a dolphin in half represent anything meaningful? Ahem, I'm getting over myself. In art, a still life (some nickname it "dead life") is a drawing, painting, photograph, videotape, or tridimensional holographic projection of one or more inanimate dead thingies, which must always include an apple. Such straightforward elegance in art is unthought of; yet you are thinking of it now, aren't you? Stop masturbating.
- It can use Lullaby to put the entire party to sleep and counters all attacks with Doom. Fira spells work well against it.
- Still Life is the sixth episode of Series 1 of Shaun the Sheep.
- Still Life is an episode in the Shaun the Sheep series of television programs. In this episode, the farmer takes up oil painting, but during a break, the flock investigate. File:Merchandise Slider.png This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
- A still life is a pattern that remains exactly the same from generation to generation--in other words, one in which every live cell has either two or three live neighbors and no dead cell has exactly three live neighbors. Note that this means that any still pattern with exactly one island is a still life. (Empty space is not considered a still life.) Examples: A block, the most common still life: ## ## Beehive (the second most common still life), loaf and pond, respectively: # ## ## # # # # # # # # # # # # # # ## # ## ## # # # # # # # # ##
- One & two & three & four. Again: One & two & three & four Clichés play over and over and... They repeat, always the same. Spinning on a point is still still. Brouwer's fixed point theorem covers that some point remains still, but even then, in the long run, all the points end up back wherever they've been Encore: One & two & three & four. Again: One & two & three & four That last again wasn't as repetitively graceful as last time's last time's... / Are you alright? / I don't know. I feel like I feel like... maybe I need a break, if anyone asks where I am just say I said say I said...
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