no way! paper is made from pulp, which is made from trees yes, but the tree must go through a process in the factory before it is paper
How can you define a " slice" . I could slice thin or thicker. Even companies that sell sliced cheese do not all use the same thickness.
Bacon Rasher is a thin slice of fried or boiled bacon.
Tissue make the thin cucumber slice flexible
For the most part, no. Some of each slice may have a thin enough section to be (partially) transparent, though.
A homophone for "to cut a thin slice" is "sliver," while a homophone for "common" is "common."
That's an old gotcha question. The answer is yes- if you slice them up thin enough.
by trees.... they cut trees down and ground it,purifie it,dye it, and like roll it down thin enough to be called paper
escallop
Veneer
I have found no reason on the internet why off-set paper could not be used in a laser or inkjet printer. The paper needs to be of a suitable size, has a surface able to take print, and is thin enough to bend around the printer's internal rollers.
A slice of salami is often referred to as a "slice" or simply "salami slice." In culinary contexts, it may also be called a "piece" of salami. Depending on the thickness, it might be described as a "thin slice" or "thick slice."
There is not enough information to provide an answer. The prism could be thin and long or fat and short and there is no way to differentiate between those possibilities. There is not enough information to provide an answer. The prism could be thin and long or fat and short and there is no way to differentiate between those possibilities. There is not enough information to provide an answer. The prism could be thin and long or fat and short and there is no way to differentiate between those possibilities. There is not enough information to provide an answer. The prism could be thin and long or fat and short and there is no way to differentiate between those possibilities.