Aisle interrupters
(noun)
product signs that jut into the aisle from the shelf, a point of purchase sales promotion device
Examples of Aisle interrupters in the following topics:
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Sales Promotion
- Aisle interrupters or signs jut into the aisle from the shelf, hanging signs called danglers sway with consumer traffic, product dump bins stimulate curiosity, glorifiers elevate products for better visibility, wobblersigns draw attention and lipstickboards convey product information written in crayon.
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German Gothic Architecture
- The nave and the aisles are about the same height.
- Construction began in 1248 and took, with interruptions, until 1880 to complete—a period of over 600 years.
- In hall churches, the aisles and nave are almost the same height and the stained glass windows are typically the full height of the walls, allowing in maximum light and space.
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Ottonian Architecture in the Early European Middle Ages
- Barring a few examples that were influenced by the octagonal Palatine Chapel built by Charlemagne in Aachen, Ottonian religious architecture tends to diverge from the model of the central-plan church, drawing inspiration instead from the Roman basilica, which typically consisted of a long central nave with an aisle at each side and an apse at one end.
- The central body of the church has the nave with two aisles sided by two towers characteristic of Carolingian architecture, but it also displays novelties anticipating Romanesque architecture, including the alternation of pillars and columns (a common feature in later Saxon churches), semi-blind arcades in galleries on the nave, and column capitals decorated with stylized leaves of acanthus and human heads .
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Molecularity
- Once a group gathers at the door, the speed at which other people leave their seats and move along the aisles has no influence on the overall exit rate.
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Em-Dashes and En-Dashes
- Dashes are often used to mark interruptions within sentences, or to show the relationships between words.
- Dashes are often used to mark interruptions within sentences.
- Em dashes are also used to indicate that a sentence is unfinished because the speaker has been interrupted.
- Similarly, they can be used in place of an ellipsis to illustrate an instance where a sentence is stopped short because the speaker is interrupted or too emotional to continue.
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Warehousing
- The image shows goods loaded on pallets to the left of the aisle, and stacked pallets with no loads to the right of the aisle.
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Romanesque Architecture: The Church of Saint-Lazare
- The interior of the cathedral has a nave and two aisles, divided by massive columns with longitudinal carvings punctuated with decorated Romanesque capitals.
- The plan of the cathedral has a narthex, or antechamber, of two bays topped by two towers, followed by a seven-bay nave flanked by side aisles and a transept with the tower surmounting cross.
- Lazare has a ground plan in the form of a Latin cross, with an aisled nave, a plain transept, and a three-stage choir with a semicircular end.
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Inactivating and Marking Target Genes with Transposons
- Transposons allow genes to be transferred to a host organism's chromosome, interrupting or modifying the function of a gene.
- As a result, when a genetic region is interrupted by integration of pBR322, the gene function is lost but new gene function (resistance to specific antibiotics) is gained.
- Sleeping Beauty, is designed to interrupt a gene in such a way that it causes maximal genetic havoc.
- Specifically, the transposon contains signals to truncate expression of an interrupted gene at the site of the insertion and then restart expression of a second truncated gene.
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SOUNDS OF LETTERS
- ae like ai in aisle; oe like oi in oil; ei as in rein; au like ow in how; eu with its two elements, ĕ and ŭ, pronounced in rapid succession; ui occurs almost exclusively in cui and huic.
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SOUNDS OF LETTERS
- ae like ai in aisle; oe like oi in oil; ei as in rein; au like ow in how; eu with its two elements, ĕ and ŭ, pronounced in rapid succession; ui occurs almost exclusively in cui and huic.