Apollo Gas Services Ltd.
Address
Graphic House Unit 6Haugh Lane
Addison Industrial Estate
Blaydon On Tyne
NE21 4TE
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Information about words in this company name or address
apollo
1. the ancient Greek and Roman god of light, healing, music, poetry, prophecy, and manly beauty; the son of Leto and brother of Artemis.
2. a very handsome young man.
3. Aerospace.one of a series of U.S. spacecraft designed to carry astronauts to the moon and back.
1. Apollo, Phoebus, Phoebus Apollo, Greek deity
usage: Greek god of light; god of prophesy and poetry and music and healing; son of Zeus and Leto; twin brother of Artemis.
The Apollo program was the United States spaceflight effort which landed the first humans on Earth''s Moon. Conceived during the Eisenhower administration and conducted by NASA, Apollo began in earnest after President John F. Kennedy''s 1961 address to Congress declaring a national goal of "landing a man on the Moon" by the end of the decade in a competition with the Soviet Union for supremacy in space.
Buzz Aldrin during Apollo 11''s first moon landing mission in 1969This goal was first accomplished during the Apollo 11 mission on July 20, 1969 when astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed, while Michael Collins remained in lunar orbit. Five subsequent Apollo missions also landed astronauts on the Moon, the last in December 1972. In these six Apollo spaceflights, 12 men walked on the Moon. These are the only times humans have landed on another celestial body
gas
gas, in physics, one of the three commonly recognized states of matter, the other two being solid and liquid. A substance in the gaseous state has neither definite shape nor definite volume. Like liquids, gases are fluids and assume the shape of their containers. Unlike liquids, they will expand to fill any container, regardless of its size. All gases condense into liquids or solids when sufficiently cooled or compressed (see compression; condensation; liquefaction). Most gases first liquefy, but some pass directly into the solid state (see sublimation); carbon dioxide, for example, can condense into dry ice. Some gases are extremely soluble in certain liquids, the liquid absorbing many times its own volume of gas. Some solids, by a process called adsorption, can take up many times their own volume of certain gases. The behavior of gases under various conditions of pressure, temperature, and volume is described by the various gas laws. Many of the properties of gases can be understood by considering the fact that only a small part of the volume of a gas is occupied by its atoms or molecules, which are in rapid, random motion.
1. gas, state of matter, state
usage: the state of matter distinguished from the solid and liquid states by: relatively low density and viscosity; relatively great expansion and contraction with changes in pressure and temperature; the ability to diffuse readily; and the spontaneous tendency to become distributed uniformly throughout any container
2. gas, fluid
usage: a fluid in the gaseous state having neither independent shape nor volume and being able to expand indefinitely
3. gasoline, gasolene, gas, petrol, fuel, hydrocarbon
usage: a volatile flammable mixture of hydrocarbons (hexane and heptane and octane etc.) derived from petroleum; used mainly as a fuel in internal-combustion engines
4. flatulence, flatulency, gas, physiological state, physiological condition
usage: a state of excessive gas in the alimentary canal
5. accelerator, accelerator pedal, gas pedal, gas, throttle, gun, pedal, treadle, foot pedal, foot lever
usage: a pedal that controls the throttle valve; "he stepped on the gas"
6. natural gas, gas, fossil fuel
usage: a fossil fuel in the gaseous state; used for cooking and heating home
services
1. an act of helpful activity; help; aid: to do someone a service.
2. the supplying or supplier of utilities or commodities, as water, electricity, or gas, required or demanded by the public.
3. the providing or a provider of accommodation and activities required by the public, as maintenance, repair, etc.: The manufacturer guarantees service and parts.
4. the organized system of apparatus, appliances, employees, etc., for supplying some accommodation required by the public: a television repair service.
5. the supplying or a supplier of public communication and transportation: telephone service; bus service.
1. service, serve, function, work, operate, go, run
usage: be used by; as of a utility; "The sewage plant served the neighboring communities"; "The garage served to shelter his horses"
2. service, tune, tune up
usage: make fit for use; "service my truck"; "the washing machine needs to be serviced"
3. serve, service, copulate, mate, pair, couple
usage: mate with; "male animals serve the females for breeding purposes"
8. service, accommodation
usage: periodic maintenance on a car or machine; "it was time for an overhaul on the tractor"
9. overhaul, inspection and repair, service, care, maintenance, upkeep
usage: tableware consisting of a complete set of articles for use at table
10. service, table service, tableware
usage: a stroke that puts the ball in play; "his powerful serves won the game"
11. serve, service, tennis stroke, tennis shot
usage: the act of delivering a writ or summons upon someone; "he accepted service of the subpoena"
12. service, serving, service of process, delivery, bringing
usage: Canadian writer who wrote about life in the Yukon Territory
13. Service, Robert William Service, writer, author
usage: a means of serving; "of no avail"; "there''s no help for it"
14. avail, help, service, helpfulness
usage: the act of mating by male animals; "the bull was worth good money in servicing fees"
15. servicing, service, coupling, mating, pairing, conjugation, union, sexual union
usage: the acts performed by an English feudal tenant for the benefit of his lord which formed the consideration for the property granted to him
blaydon on tyne
Blaydon is a town in the North East of England in the Metropolitan Borough of Gateshead. The former urban district, however, extends much further, its fourteen and a half square miles constituting the largest administrative district, after Newcastle, on Tyneside. Included within this area, which extends inland from the Tyne along the River Derwent for ten miles, are the mining communities of Chopwell and High Spen as well as the villages of Rowlands Gill, Blackhall Mill, Barlow and Stella and the larger and more urban towns of Blaydon and Winlaton. It has a population of 14,648.
The town of Blaydon is essentially an industrial area and is not more than two centuries old. Indeed in the 1760s there was little here but a few farms and cottages. In the latter part of the same century a smelting works was set up from which sprang the industrial growth of the area.
Modern Blaydon stands close to the Tyne with the A695, a key road from Gateshead to Hexham, passing through the town centre. Between this main road and the river is the railway and, beyond it, in a bend of the Tyne is the industrial district of Blaydon Haughs. The main part of the town lies south of the railway.
Despite being a largely urban and industrial town, there are various rural aspects to Blaydon and the surrounding area. The area has many acres of open countryside mostly at 500 feet or more above sea level and numerous farms and similar holdings. Between High Spen and Chopwell are large Forestry Commission woods and these and other forested areas extend down the hillside to the Derwent river which lies on the east and forms the urban district boundary.
The area is also home to Shibdon Pond at the former site of Blaydon Main Colliery. Shibdon Pond is a nature reserve situated at the Eastern end of the town. Many species of waterfowl live on the pond and surrounding marshland, and a hide is available for ornithologists. English Nature has designated Shibdon Pond as one of Tyne and Wear''s Sites of Special Scientific Interest . The subject of a regeneration campaign, Shibdon Dene is another recreational area consisting of a pathway between a great number of fine trees.

