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The decimal system tentative tension tent tennis
Usually depends how many words it is.
Translators must pay special attention to what someone is saying an not just the words when translating any work.
Minoans' writing and counting system was actually a decimal system. Their writing system used pictographs written' on clay tablets to stand for sounds in words. To count they used a decimal system based on the number 10!
Translators must pay special attention to what someone is saying an not just the words when translating any work.
English AND Latin peoples STILL ARE translating.
One can find information about translating words from English to French at many on-line translator sites. For example translation babylon and Wiktionary both supply this information.
Assuming it is a non-fiction book (school libraries rarely shelve fiction books by the Dewey numbers designated for fiction) you should be able to find it using a subject or subject keyword catalog search. If there is a specific book but you don't remember title or author, then you can use the library catalog (which is usually online and accessible either from your home computer or at a terminal at the library) and enter a keyword that relates to its subject matter in the right field, which might be "subject" or "Keyword" depending on the catalog. If you remember any words in the title, you might also search the title field. Libraries should also have a guide to the Dewey Decimal system...you don't have to memorize it. Look at this guide and determine the subject and corresponding number or ask the librarian or study the library map to find where that shelf might be located.
write the following decimal numbers in words .0087945
No. There are too many words. I advise you to get a dictionary.
Kafka's original words can have many different meanings. (Apex)
There are no decimal words! The number is eight hundredths.