- A ring worn by a married person, given by the spouse at their wedding
- A wedding ring or wedding band is a metal ring indicating the wearer is married. Depending on the local culture, it is worn on the base of the right or the left ring finger. The custom of wearing such a ring has spread widely beyond its origin in Europe.
- Represent permanency, "until death us do part". (This may scare off your man though!)
- Don't get this confused with Engagement Rings. Engagement Rings are usually just a solitaire ring, i.e. One stone. The wedding ring is the complimentary band that accompanies that solitaire ring. Decorated in many different styles, and usually consisting of a lot more diamonds, either paved or set.
- The chemical element of atomic number 74, a hard steel-gray metal of the transition series. It has a very high melting point (3410°C) and is used to make electric light filaments
- a heavy grey-white metallic element; the pure form is used mainly in electrical applications; it is found in several ores including wolframite and scheelite
- Tungsten , also known as wolfram (, ), is a chemical element with the chemical symbol W and atomic number 74.
- The Tungsten series was Palm, Inc.'s line of business-class Palm OS-based PDAs. With the purchase of the Palm name from PalmSource, Palm has dropped the Tungsten name from its newer offerings. , only the Tungsten E2 continues to use the Tungsten name.
- For Men is an Italian magazine devoted to sex, health, nutrition, hobby, sport and other men's issues. Its published in Milan, Italy by the publishing company Cairo Editore.
- premature ejaculation - reaching orgasm before you want to; for many men this can mean before intercourse has begun or too soon after commencing intercourse.
Tungsten 3 (redux - 180 dpi)
This would be my third experiment with my new camera's tungsten setting (my first being of a staircase and some flowers... exciting!).
Not to whine overmuch, but the slight blurring should be an indicator that this was a rather difficult shot to get. I'd tuned the camera speed (perhaps unwisely) to ISO 200 and... the battery died. Thusly, this shot was accomplished at temperatures only slightly above freezing whilst I toggled the battery door with icy fingers in an effort to squeeze more juice from the dying battery. All in all, not one of my better moments.
So, saying that this shot would've been less blurry with a tripod is a little like saying the Hindenburg would've probably remained airborne if someone had packed a fire extinguisher. Sometimes we simply have to take what we can get and try to enjoy the results regardless.