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There is insufficient information for us to even begin to understand this question. Please edit the question to include more context or relevant information. If you want to ask questions about the "following", then I suggest that you make sure that there is something that is following.
ask someone else
If you want to ask questions about the "following", then I suggest that you make sure that there is something that is following.Please don't write "the following" if you don't provide a list.
Not quite sure what you mean. Magma? Pragmatic? Magnetic? - Check the spelling, and ask again.
You apply a force opposite to the direction of motion.Or you could simply ask them to slow down.
Many jobs were unsafe (apex)
When you ask us about "the following" and don't give us "the following", you force us to guess.My guess is "a thermonuclear weapon". That's pretty unsafe.
As in the following examples:- May I ask you .... Can you tell me .... Why is it .... For what reason is .... Tell me is it true that ....
The statement is not clear. Can you provide more context or rephrase the question?
They can ask you what sort of brain damage is involved in asking a question about "the following" while neglecting to provide "the following."
If you want to ask questions about the "following", then I suggest that you make sure that there is something that is following.If you want to ask questions about the "following", then I suggest that you make sure that there is something that is following.
In physics, traction is friction between two objects that are touching. When a car in on ice, the coefficient of friction between the tires and the ice is very low. This is when the car is said to have "no traction." In reality it has some traction, just a relatively small amount of traction when compared to it's momentum. Traction is friction. Oh, and the centrifugal force doesn't exist. It's a fool's way of explaining centripetal force. Ask more tech/physics/math questions at www.electricalninja.com in the "Ask a Ninja" section.
Ask Luke Skywalker
Ask him
Of course it's not true. Ask your teacher or parent about fiction.
Please be more specific about who do you refer to as "he", when you ask about dispersion force. This way you can get an exact answer.
There is insufficient information for us to even begin to understand this question. Please edit the question to include more context or relevant information. If you want to ask questions about the "following", then I suggest that you make sure that there is something that is following.