Yes kerb is how you spell curb in British English, and curb is how you spell kerb in American English.
You don't. That is the correct spelling.
The proper noun is "Britain", referring generally to Great Britain or to historical England.
'Amazing' is the correct spelling in Britain.
Archaeological, at least in Britain and Commonwealth, and in academia.
In the USA, it is spelt: toweling.In Britain, it is spelt: towelling.Being English, I would spell it as towelling.
A homophone for kerb would be "curb" which means to restrain, as in "curb your enthusiasm."
Kerb is British English while curb is American English
Wheels toward the curb. What is a Kerb?^^^You aim the wheels toward the curb so that if your parking brake fails, the vehicle won't roll into traffic. It will roll into the curb and be stopped
Climb Limb Curb Barb Kerb Garb Absorb Dumb
Used as a noun, a curb (kerb in British English) is a row of concrete along the edge of a road, or, more generally, a raised margin along the edge of something.
Blurb, curb, erb, erbe, herb, kerb, scherb, serb, disturb, perturb, reverb, adverb, and superb are all rhymes of verb.
Curb weight is the weight of a vehicle with all the equipment and operating materials like motor oil, transmission oil and a full tank of fuel. Baggage and passengers are not included in curb weight.Curb weight is the American term. Kerb weight is the English term.
The car has been in collision with the kerb at the side of the road Possiblly resulting in suspension and chassis damage being caused to the vehicle
The edge of the pavement near the road is called the "curb" in the US and the "kerb" in the UK. They are spelled differently but they are pronounced the same.
yes you can, an example would be "Don't hit the curb". another would be "can you use curb in a sentence". Edit; The edge of the road, or the gutter, is spelled kerb in Australia. Curb has a different meaning altogether. For example ... "If you wish to live a long and healthy life you should curb your appetite for fatty foods and alcohol." It simply means to be more moderate, not that what-ever it is should be eliminated completely.
You turn your front wheels to point towards the kerb. That way - if your handbrake fails - the car will roll in the direction the wheels are pointing - and the curb will stop the car going any further.
In most countries that I have lived in or visited, the car must be parallel to the kerb (unless authorised signs allow for angled parking) Here in Australia the Road Safety Parking Regulations Act as applied from State to State require parallel parking on the passenger side kerb only (left) unless the road is a One Way street. Parking must be as close to the kerb as is practicable (it used to be 10 inches maximum but that got repealed) a reasonable distance from the kerb is defined as what the reasonable person would consider praticable. Angle parking is sign posted and either 45 or 90 degrees to the left hand kerb. In U.K. both sides of the road may be used during daylight hours but only the left (passenger) side after dark.