The word "Dissemble" means to hide behind a false appearance. For example... A magician dissembles because what he's really doing isn't what he pretends to be doing. It is all just an illusion.
There is no such word. If you mean 'dissemble' that means to give a false or misleading appearance to something or to conceal the truth or the real nature.
750 cc800 if dissembled recently10w-40
Not as long as you don't forget how to put it back together and it doesn't get dusty or rusty.
Yes, it does. But the new apple Mac's have this function dissembled.
the rewireable can be dissembled and has some sort of chucks to hold a new element
you replace it these are closed just like tin cans .. a double roll seal before 1960 they could be dissembled
The Complete Thermostat Assembly must be replaced as a unit It CANNOT be dissembled!! Replacement assembly’s are available from “http://www.daewoous.com/”
You have a blown head gasket, cracked head, or both. The engine must be dissembled to make the repair. Stop driving this car immediately or you will destroy the engine.
The following words rhyme with trembles - ramble scramble shamble tremble bumble bramble jumble humble resemble assemble fumble
Window regulator controls the up and down motions of your car window. Both electric and manual windows have a window regulator. Not the easiest part to replace, but once you dissembled the door panel it should be fairly simple to replace.
I believe the word "dissembled" would rhyme. "Dissemble" means: "to put on a false appearance : conceal facts, intentions, or feelings under some pretense."
Yes - the most likely cause for the screen not to work is that 1. Back-light burned out 2. Inverter (takes DC power and converts it to AC power for the backlight) has gone bad 3. or the video controller chip on the motherboard has somehow fried (highly unlikely) All three instances require the laptop to be dissembled.
ENIAC was never sold, it was built to order on a cost plus wartime Army contract. The original estimated cost to build ENIAC in the contract was roughly $50,000, however by the time it was finished the final cost was over $500,000. About a year after completion, ENIAC was dissembled and shipped to the BRL Aberdeen where it was used for about a decade. The Army owned it from the day the contract was signed until it was retired.