Rhapsody may refer to:
Rhapsody is a Canadian music television series which aired on CBC Television from 1958 to 1959.
This series featured three to four staged sequences of music and dance, led by Ivan Romanoff's orchestra.
This half-hour series was broadcast in the first season on Tuesdays at 10:00 p.m. (Eastern time) from 22 July to 28 October 1958. The second season aired on Sunday evenings from 28 June to 27 September 1959 at 7:30 p.m. except the final two episodes which were rescheduled to 10:00 p.m.
Rhapsody is a 1915 piece for piano solo by the English composer John Ireland (1879–1972).
A performance takes about 8 minutes.
BBC Music Magazine (September 2010) called it "one of Ireland’s most important piano works". In the Gramophone Awards Issue 2010, Andrew Achenbach described it as a "magnificently stormy essay". According to Muso Magazine (August 2010), it "contains the sort of wacky virtuosity found in Debussy’s L'isle joyeuse" (1904).
Adhesive may be used interchangeably with glue, cement, mucilage, or paste, and is any substance applied to one surface, or both surfaces, of two separate items that binds them together and resists their separation. Adjectives may be used in conjunction with the word “adhesive” to describe properties based on the substance's physical or chemical form, the type of materials joined, or conditions under which it is applied.
The use of adhesives offers many advantages over binding techniques such as sewing, mechanical fastening, thermal bonding, etc. These include the ability to bind different materials together, to distribute stress more efficiently across the joint, the cost effectiveness of an easily mechanized process, an improvement in aesthetic design, and increased design flexibility. Disadvantages of adhesive use include decreased stability at high temperatures, relative weakness in bonding large objects with a small bonding surface area, and greater difficulty in separating objects during testing. Adhesives are typically organized by the method of adhesion. These are then organized into reactive and non-reactive adhesives, which refers to whether the adhesive chemically reacts in order to harden. Alternatively they can be organized by whether the raw stock is of natural or synthetic origin, or by their starting physical phase.
Glue is any fluid adhesive.
Glue or GLUE may also refer to:
Glue, or Glue - Historia adolescente en medio de la nada, is a 2006 Argentine film written and directed by Argentine film director Alexis Dos Santos and was his debut long feature film.
The movie is set in a small Argentine town in Zapala, Neuquén, south Patagonia. Lucas (Nahuel Biscayart), a 16-year-old boy full of testosterone, plays in a punk rock band with his friend Nacho (Nahuel Viale). When he meets a girl, Andrea (Inés Efron), the three mutually engage in drug use and sexual exploration.
In acronyms