Yes, you can.
It depends what 'which' refers to. If it refers to one thing, you say 'is', and if more than one you say 'are'. The cup which is on the table belongs to me. The cups which are on the table belong to me.
There was a very popular song in the 1920s called, "Yes! We have no bananas!" and it has been a recurring comedic theme in a variety of movies, songs and television shows ever since. It derives from a clerks unwillingness to tell a customer "no". So if one is asked if there are any bananas, and you don't have them, instead of saying "no", you say, "Yes, we have no bananas!" "Yes, we have no bananas, we have no bananas, today!" was a fuller form of the line.
No, it is not correct to say "one an." The correct phrase is "one and a half day" to refer to one full day and half of another day.
Me gusta el plátano Dialectal (bananas)
-I thought the answer was 'Orange you glad I didn't say bananas'. It's a "knock-knock" joke: knock knock who's there Orange Orange who? Orange you glad I didn't say bananas!
No, bees polinate the banana flowers and the flowers turn into bananas. I don't know who would say there are bees in bananas.
Plátanos = bananas.
This is a hard one!Truthfully I don't know for sure. Some people say no because of bananas waxy skin feel. Others just say no. Or, yes they do because every thing has cells. So just use one of those answers.
One half in French would be demi.
1 half in percentage = 1/2% (one-half percent)
they normally say how yummy bananas are.☺
You can say "ṣí àbọ́ lẹ́rù" in Yoruba, which translates to "A table for one or two please."