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Subject Item
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Subject Item
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Curtain
rdfs:comment
Curtains are recurring objects in the Legend of Zelda series. Theater stages made use of curtains to ease the transition from one scene to another and allow the performers to get ready without being seen. (TOS: "The Conscience of the King" ) The decontamination chamber aboard Enterprise NX-01 featured a curtain to separate male and females during the application of the decontamination gel. (ENT: "Bounty") In 2375, disturbed by his view of void space from his quarters and unable to sleep, Neelix vowed to replicate himself some curtains first thing in the morning. (VOY: "Night") Curtain (幕, Maku) is the ninth chapter of volume twelve and the one-hundred-seventh chapter of the Death Note manga series. It is the penultimate chapter of the manga. [Source] Curtains were pieces of cloth used to block the view of a stage from the crowd during a performance. Smaller curtains were also used in sentients' homes, to cover windows and stop people looking into their homes. During riots people often drew their curtains so as not to view the bloodshed. The curtains were often drawn tight in hotels, so that the inside of the rooms—which were often grubby or unkempt—were not visible to potential customers. The color of curtains varied, though deep blue curtains were in existence on the planet Belazura. There was a certain type of curtains which were transparent during the day but opaque after dark. On the planet Ambria, Caleb used a thin curtain to cover over his front door. The Curtain is a junk item in The Last Stand: Dead Zone. thumb|link=Curtain: Poirot's Last Case is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie and first published in the UK by the Collins Crime Club in September 1975 and in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company later in the same year. The final chapters of the novel tell of the death of Hercule Poirot. Not only does the novel return the characters to the setting of her first, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, but it reunites Poirot and Hastings, who had not appeared together since Dumb Witness in 1937. The golden curtain lightens as it rises; my eye glides across the surface, over hills and through valleys with nothing to latch onto. A blank icon: I gaze at it as if in a dream, as if not really here: as if away, across the peaks and vales. A curtain is a piece of cloth designed to block or obscure light from entering a window. When Marvin White and Wendy Harris came inside what they thought was a truck garage, Wendy found it odd that there was curtains on the window of the door. A curtain is a piece of fabric with a solid color or design printed on it. The fabric can be cloth, plastic, or many other materials. They are typically hung from a curtain rod, and are used to block out the sunlight or to maintain privacy.
owl:sameAs
dbr:Curtain
n90:
*Old Republic era *Rise of the Empire era *Rebellion era *New Republic era *New Jedi Order era
n77:
2006-07-04
dcterms:subject
n11: n15: n17: n20: n27: n28: n42: n45: n49: n52: n53: n56: n60: n62: n66: n71: n75: n76: n78: n81: n86: n91: n98: n108: n112: n128: n131:
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2010-09-24
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448
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1
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105.0
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2290
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2014-12-18
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Various
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Misc
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Four Swords Adventures The Wind Waker Majora's Mask A Link to the Past
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140
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The Last Stand: Dead Zone
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Curtain curtain
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Instrumental
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Junk Various
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Curtains from Majora's Mask
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107
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Varied
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A Link to the Past
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To cover a location and block one's view of it
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Varied
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2007-07-03
n16:abstract
A curtain is a piece of cloth designed to block or obscure light from entering a window. When Marvin White and Wendy Harris came inside what they thought was a truck garage, Wendy found it odd that there was curtains on the window of the door. The golden curtain lightens as it rises; my eye glides across the surface, over hills and through valleys with nothing to latch onto. A blank icon: I gaze at it as if in a dream, as if not really here: as if away, across the peaks and vales. thumb|link=Curtain: Poirot's Last Case is a work of detective fiction by Agatha Christie and first published in the UK by the Collins Crime Club in September 1975 and in the US by Dodd, Mead and Company later in the same year. The novel features Hercule Poirot and Arthur Hastings in their final appearances in Christie's works (see below). Christie wrote the novel in the early 1940s, during World War II. Partly fearing for her own survival, and partly wanting to have a fitting end to Poirot's series of novels, Christie had the novel locked away in a bank vault for over thirty years. The final Poirot novel that Christie wrote, Elephants Can Remember, was published in 1972, followed by Christie's last novel, Postern of Fate. Knowing that she could no longer write any novels, the elderly Christie authorised Curtain's removal from the vault and subsequent publication. It was the last of her books to be published during her lifetime. The final chapters of the novel tell of the death of Hercule Poirot. Not only does the novel return the characters to the setting of her first, The Mysterious Affair at Styles, but it reunites Poirot and Hastings, who had not appeared together since Dumb Witness in 1937. [Source] Curtains were pieces of cloth used to block the view of a stage from the crowd during a performance. Smaller curtains were also used in sentients' homes, to cover windows and stop people looking into their homes. During riots people often drew their curtains so as not to view the bloodshed. The curtains were often drawn tight in hotels, so that the inside of the rooms—which were often grubby or unkempt—were not visible to potential customers. The color of curtains varied, though deep blue curtains were in existence on the planet Belazura. There was a certain type of curtains which were transparent during the day but opaque after dark. On the planet Ambria, Caleb used a thin curtain to cover over his front door. Wookiees were one species known to utilize curtains, and they did so on their homeworld of Kashyyyk. The inhabitants of Ord Cestus also used curtains. Jabba the Hutt had curtains in his palace which he used to hide himself and his court to surprise Leia Organa and Han Solo. Curtains were also used by the Yuuzhan Vong in their worldships, though these were presumably organic. Theater stages made use of curtains to ease the transition from one scene to another and allow the performers to get ready without being seen. (TOS: "The Conscience of the King" ) The decontamination chamber aboard Enterprise NX-01 featured a curtain to separate male and females during the application of the decontamination gel. (ENT: "Bounty") In 2375, disturbed by his view of void space from his quarters and unable to sleep, Neelix vowed to replicate himself some curtains first thing in the morning. (VOY: "Night") In 2376, when Neelix told Tuvok that he was haunted by the nebula outside the windows of USS Voyager's mess hall, the Vulcan suggested Captain Janeway might give him permission to install curtains. Neelix seemed pleased with the idea, adding that he knew exactly the material to use. (VOY: "The Haunting of Deck Twelve") The Curtain is a junk item in The Last Stand: Dead Zone. Curtains are recurring objects in the Legend of Zelda series. Curtain (幕, Maku) is the ninth chapter of volume twelve and the one-hundred-seventh chapter of the Death Note manga series. It is the penultimate chapter of the manga. A curtain is a piece of fabric with a solid color or design printed on it. The fabric can be cloth, plastic, or many other materials. They are typically hung from a curtain rod, and are used to block out the sunlight or to maintain privacy.