HUFFY PROSPECT BICYCLE. DIY BIKE LIFT. JUNK DIRT BIKES FOR SALE
Huffy Prospect Bicycle
A mental picture of a future or anticipated event
search for something desirable; "prospect a job"
expectation: belief about (or mental picture of) the future
The possibility or likelihood of some future event occurring
Chances or opportunities for success or wealth
the possibility of future success; "his prospects as a writer are excellent"
ride a bicycle
A vehicle composed of two wheels held in a frame one behind the other, propelled by pedals and steered with handlebars attached to the front wheel
a wheeled vehicle that has two wheels and is moved by foot pedals
In graph theory, a pseudoforest is an undirected graphThe kind of undirected graph considered here is often called a multigraph or pseudograph, to distinguish it from a simple graph. in which every connected component has at most one cycle.
quick to take offense
roused to anger; "stayed huffy a good while"- Mark Twain; "she gets mad when you wake her up so early"; "mad at his friend"; "sore over a remark"
(huffily) in a huffy manner; "`Don't bother to call me back,' he said huffily"
Annoyed or irritated and quick to take offense at petty things
Prospect Tower II
This small flint tower stands on the very edge of the garden of Belmont Park (the house was remodelled by Samuel Wyatt in 1792), approached by an avenue of walnut trees. On its other side is a mature park and a now ragged cricket pitch. It was built in about 1808 for General, later Lord, Harris of Seringapatam. He called it his ‘Whim’, and one suspects that the pleasant upper room, at least, was his own den, into which the family were sometimes allowed for tea.
The General bought Belmont, which owed its name to its ‘high situation and extensive prospect’, in 1801, with prize money won in India. Farming and gardening were his chief enthusiasms and he soon doubled the size of the pleasure grounds to include the land in which the tower still stands.
The enthusiasm of the 4th Lord Harris was of a different kind. He was one of the fathers of cricket, and it was he who created a pitch in about 1870 and commandeered this tower as a changing room: hooks for the gear still decorate the walls. There are only two rooms in the tower for living and sleeping, but the prospect from its windows is still extensive; and you can dream of all those centuries, hoped for and, sometimes, achieved.
Prospect Drive
Prospect Drive, Davenport, Iowa, February 28, 2009