Depends which angle you look from.
AnswerYes the leaning tower of Pisa is in Italy. The reason why they call it the "Leaning Tower" of Pisa is, because the ground is not stable and it looks like it is leaning over. The "scientists" if that is what you call them have built stilts or poles to keep it from falling over.
It leans to the south. It would depend on where you're looking to determine left or right.
Anything can be a landmark but yes, the Tower of Pisa is a building, its also slightly tilting and left alone, it would fall over. -i think the tower of Pisa is a tower(well that's what ive been told by teachers) :-) ADDED: The Tower of Pisa is a building that is also a famous landmark, perhaps more famous because it is leaning over due to the foundations subsiding. (It would have been plumb when built!)
Literally - the stitch appears to lean towards the left (SSK versus K2tog).
Answers.com tries to give factual answers based on fact, not on any political leaning. ======== Opinions come from whoever gets to answer first.
Yes, when you lean on the wall, you can lean it on your left
The Clintons are Democrats, that lean more toward the center, not what you would classify as Liberal, which is leaning toward the left. We have never had a Liberal president.
There are news stations on every end of the political spectrum. Many news stations deliver a left-leaning bias. There is a whole list of major news agencies and which way they lean, as far as political bias, at Politic Nation .com.
you lean by left right left right. :P
Conservative is the term for right-leaning.
The answer depends on how and why the cars are leaning.
The tower currently leans at 5.6 degrees. Another 1.4 degrees will be enough to bring 14,000 tons of intricately carved white marble crashing to the ground, according to Schwartz's tests. At 7 degrees the model shows that walls cannot support the structure anymore. High-tension areas on the lower floors on the northern side caused the bricks to pull apart.However, Schwartz believes that this dreadful scenario will not occur in the near future. "The structure is really good," she says. "It could last another 75 to100 years, if the soil holds." The soft, sandy subsoil is what has given the tower its lean since Bonanno Pisano began building it in 1173. In 1990, the tower had to be closed to the public. Keen to re-open Pisa's landmark in time for the millennium, the committee has started frantic work to keep the tower aloft.