- Two girls and a boy talking to old lady
- Two girls and a boy skipping in the garden
- Two girls and a boy playing with a cat and kitten
- Two girls and a boy looking at baby ducks
- Two Girls
- Two girls
Two girls knitting and reading - Two Girls
One girl sitting on a chair holding a fan with another girl walking by - Two girls
Two girls - Two gentlemen talking
Two gentlemen talking - Two fairies
- Two faces
Two faces - Two extinct attached echinoderms
- Two early types of liquid-fuel, rocket motors.
Two early types of liquid-fuel, rocket motors. Left, the original ARS motor; right, a four-nozzle motor for ARS No. 4 rocket. Thrust stud for fastening to rocket Blast chamber Fuel feed Oxygen feed Nozzle Water jacket Nozzles Thrust and fuel column attached to rocket Fuel feed - Two dogs and a horse
Two dogs and a horse - Two dogs
- Two dogs
- Two dogs
- Two dogs
- Two deer
Two deer - Two crying girls
- Two Cretan Vases
We must realize, of course, that the Greeks were much indebted to the Ægeans; for discoveries about the shores and islands of the Ægean Sea show that long before the advent of the Greeks they used tools and weapons of rough and then of polished stone, and later of copper and tin and bronze; that they lived on farms and in villages and cities, and were governed by monarchs who dwelt in palaces adorned with paintings and fine carvings, and filled with court gentlemen and ladies who wore jewelry and fine clothing. Exquisite pottery was used, decorated with taste and skill; ivory was carved and gems were engraved, and articles were made of silver and bronze and gold. As early as the sixth century B. C., the Greeks made things more beautiful than had ever been made before. One almost feels like saying that the Greeks invented beauty. Such a declaration would be absurd of course: but it seems to be a fact that the Greeks had a conception of beauty that was wholly original with them, and that was not only finer than that which any other people had ever had before, but finer than any other people have had since. - Two cows
- Two cows
- Two common centipedes
- Two children riding ponies on the beach
Two children riding ponies on the beach - Two children offering hay to cow
- Two cherubim fanning the flames
- Two cats running
Two cats running - Two cats
- Two cats
Two cats - Two Camels
- Two calves
- Two braves
- Two boys eyeing some apples on a tree
Two boys eyeing some apples on a tree - Two boys challenging each other
- Two boys and old lady
Two boys and old lady - Two Blind Women
- Two Blind Men
Matthew 9:27-31 - Two birds with long necks
Two birds with long necks - Two birds watching a bug
- Two Birds
- Two Birds
Two Birds - Two Birds
Two Birds - Two bald heads
- Two aspects of the Christ
- Two angels
- Two Angels
Two angels blowing horns - Two Angels
- Two Angels
Two Angels - Twisting a man's Ears
He is held securely by two men, in the service of a tribunal, who are instructed to give pain, by a particular method of twisting the cartilages of the ears . - Twisted Lime worm ( Serpula contortuplicata )
In the Serpulacees ( Serpulacea ), the gills are located entirely at the front end of the body; the cilia that coat her cause a current to flow into the water, which supplies food to the mouth opening immediately below it. The head segment is not separated from the mouth segment, as is the case with most other Ringworms, but has grown together with it. - Twinkle Twinkle Little Star
- Twine phones
The string telephones which for several years have been flooding the boulevards and the streets of the different cities of Europe, and whose invention dates back, as we have seen, to the year 1667, are very interesting apparatuses by them themselves, and we are astonished that they did not appear rather in the physics cabinets. They consist of cylindrical-conical tubes of metal or cardboard, one end of which is closed by a stretched membrane of parchment, in the center of which is fixed by a knot the string or cord intended to bring them together. When two tubes of this kind are thus joined together and that the wire is tight, as shown, it suffices for a person to apply one of these tubes against the ear and for another person to speak very close to the opening of the other tube, so that all the words spoken by the latter are immediately transmitted to the other, and one can even converse in this manner in an almost low voice. - Twenty-Passenger Break for the World's Fair
- twenty-one string harp
- Twenty-fifth ordinary
Twenty-fifth ordinary - Twenty second ordinary
Twenty second ordinary - Twelvth Sunday in Ordinary time
Twelvth Sunday in Ordinary time - Twelfth to thirteenth century
- Twelfth to fourteenth century