And if they do, the parts will corrode far more rapidly than they would otherwise.
Ethanol must be transported on trucks because it would corrode the rubber rings in a pipeline.
Aside from its unpleasant odor, the toxic gas-a natural byproduct of organic and inorganic wastes-can corrode metal.
Or does empathy so control -- and even corrode -- our nature that it affects every intellectual argument?
And now medical experts have joined the opposition, saying they would "undermine the presumption of confidentiality and corrode trust".
In the modern world, however, self-indulgence and feudal flim-flam corrode both the company's external image and its internal ethics.
As a faith-based creed, populism always tended to corrode respect for elite achievement, individualism, urban life, secularism, and capitalism.
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It takes up to 1 millisecond to write a single one or a zero to flash, and the parts corrode with each stroke.
But many are anxious about chemicals--acids to dissolve minerals and create cracks, surfactants to make fluids more slippery, agents to prevent bacteria that corrode pipes.
Crooked transactions corrode confidence, which hurts firms and investors alike.
They can spitting up acid that corrode armors and such.
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Ethanol, which is used mainly as an additive to petrol, is not a particularly good fuel: it offers only about two-thirds as much energy as petrol and can corrode pipelines and car engines.
Seamless metal containers still have myriad uses in the high-tech age: they make particularly good casings for long-life lithium ion batteries, used in mobile phones and notebook computers, since they don't corrode as welded casings do.
Officials feared the brackish storm water that poured into tunnels could corrode vulnerable signal and switching systems, complicating the task of reopening a bus and rail system that ferries 8.5 million passengers on a typical workday.
Officials feared the brackish storm water that poured into subway tunnels and onto tracks could corrode vulnerable signal and switching systems, adding to the time workers will need to reopen the MTA's full system, which ferries 8.5 million passengers on a typical workday.
Lord Carloway pointed out that evidence in the case showed Transco was aware by 1988 that within a decade of being laid ductile iron mains could corrode in adverse soil conditions and the problem had been highlighted by fatal blasts at Warrington and Ilkeston.
BBC: NEWS | UK | Scotland | Gas main was 'significant danger'
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