- soft
seat Ejection seat,
rescue seat in an
aircraft Folding seat Hard
seat Infant car
seat, for a
small child in a car Jump
seat,
auxiliary seat in a...
-
seats. In the
provinces of
Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, and Nova
Scotia the term "shire town" is used in
place of
county seat.
County seats in...
-
SEAT S.A. (English: /ˈseɪɑːt/; Spanish: [
ˈseat]; from
Spanish Sociedad Española de Automóviles de Turismo, lit. 'Spanish P****enger Car Company') is a Spanish...
-
Power seats began appearing in
automobiles in the late 1940s. Most
early seats were fore-aft only,
which saved little work. The four way
power seats showed...
-
Isles today. A clan
seat refers to the
seat of the
chief of a
Scottish clan. List of
family seats of
English nobility List of
family seats of
Irish nobility...
-
which could be
extended up to 762
litres (26.9 cu ft) by
folding rear
seats. In 1996, the Córdoba
range was
extended with a coupé (Córdoba SX) and an...
-
important for the
front seats than the rear
seats. A
child safety seat or
child restraint system is a
restraint which is
secured to the
seat of an automobile...
-
before the
seat is fired. The only
commercial jetliner ever ****ed with
ejection seats was the
Soviet Tupolev Tu-144. However, the
seats were present...
- the
front seats from 1970. Some cars like the
Renault Vel
Satis use this
system for the
front seats. A
General Motors ****essment
concluded seat-mounted...
- p****enger safety, all
airline seats are
equipped with seatbelts.
Seats are
frequently equipped with
further amenities.
Airline seats may be
equipped with a reclining...