“There is much joshing and spinning out of repartee, bits and pieces of verbal exchange are tossed hither and thither, everyone enters into the fiction that this is just an ordinary day, a day like any other.”
Stern, Lesley, and Amy Adler. Diary of a Detour. Durham: Duke University Press, 2020. p. 24.
Catalog Record
Duke University Press
“The centrifuge (on the left of Photograph 3), for example, was devised by Svedberg in 1924 and was responsible for creating the notion of protein by allowing undifferentiated substances to be discriminated by spinning (Pedersen, 1974). The molecular weight of proteins could hardly be said to exist except by virtue of the ultracentrifuge.”
Latour, Bruno, and Steve Woolgar. Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1986. p. 65.
Catalog Record
Princeton Press
“I could almost feel our string sawing his. Almost heard the snap.
Then, just like that, the green kit was spinning and wheeling out of control.
Behind us, people cheered.”
Hosseini, Khaled. The Kite Runner. New York, NY: Riverhead Books, 1993. p. 370.
Catalog Record
“For example, the electron, which constitutes a part of ordinary matter, and the positron, which is the antielectron, have opposite electric charges, - e and + e, respectively; their masses are the same; and each has a spin represented by the spin quantum number ½, which permits two ways of orienting the spinning particle in a magnetic field.”
Pauling, Linus. General Chemistry. New York, NY: Dover Publications, 2014. p. 803.
Catalog Record
ACS Publications
“By good fortune the rate of spin of a star can in many cases be detected by a careful study of the light it emits, since at one of its edges the material of the spinning star may be moving toward us and at the other edge moving away from us.”
Crick, Francis. Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature. New York: Touchstone, 1982. p. 100.
Catalog Record
“It seems possible that the protosun was originally spinning much faster, with the dust cloud revolving around the sun going correspondingly more slowly.”
Crick, Francis. Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature. New York: Touchstone, 1982. p. 100.
Catalog Record
“There are about a hundred stars within twenty light-years. Our own galaxy is a slowly spinning irregular disk of stars, dust and gas, about 100,000 light-years across, containing perhaps 1011 stars.”
Crick, Francis. Life Itself: Its Origin and Nature. New York: Touchstone, 1982. p. 35.
Catalog Record
“The additional potential arises because the spinning electron has an intrinsic magnetic moment, and ‘an electron moving in [an electrostatic] potential ‘sees’ a magnetic field’.18 ”
Cartwright, Nancy. How the Laws of Physics Lie. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2010. p. 46.
Catalog Record
Oxford University Press
“He would picture the feather coming loose from the bird, up in the clouds, half a mile above the world, twirling and spinning in violent currents, hurled by gusts of blustering wind across miles and miles of desert and mountains, to finally land, of all places and against all odds, at the foot of that one boulder for his sister to find.”
Hosseini, Khaled. And the Mountains Echoed. London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2013. p. 49.
Catalog Record
Bloomsbury
“And when the workers of OEcophylla or Polyrhachis use their larvæ for weaving the silken envelope of the nest, as described in Chapter XIII, we have a further extension and modification of the cocoon spinning activities. In this case the spinning powers of the larva are utilized for the purpose of producing an envelope, not for its individual self, but for the whole colony.”
Ritter, William Emerson. An Organismal Theory of Consciousness. Boston, 1919: Gorham Press. p. 55.
Catalog Record
Google Books
“This is the surprise of discovering oneself needing no self, one with the work, moving in disciplined ease and grace. One knows what it is to be a spinning ball of clay, a curl of pure white wood off the edge of a chisel—or one of the many hands of Kannon the Bodhisattva of Compassion.”
Snyder, Gary. The Practice of the Wild. San Francisco: North Point Press, 1990. p. 148.
Catalog Record
BeWild ReWild
“Bright red laces hang from empty hiking boots. That slight electrical hum of the clock. Spinning wheel next to a redwood desk. That such a large, billowing sleeping bag could be stuffed into such a small sack.”
Silliman, Ron. "From "OZ"." Conjunctions, no. 9 (1986): 31-39. Accessed May 25, 2021.
Catalog Record
JSTOR
“The river carried logs downstream, timber cut in the distant mountains, sent spinning on water, some get lodged in twigs and mud and stone along the shore.”
Howe, Fanny. Holy Smoke. New York: Fiction Collective, 1979. p. 85.
Catalog Record
Google Books