answersLogoWhite

0

Here is the answer

User Avatar

raah india

Lvl 2
2y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is meant by the term hammering?

There is no information for the term hammering. However, the term "Hammered" means to be very drunk, intoxicated, it can also mean badly beaten at a game or competition.


How is a large population useful?

- As people use fuel, water and food this means its good for business's because they get more people buying their products.


What MSDS means in hotel industry?

material safety data sheets for whatever products they have on site such as in laundry or kichen-usually chemicals


What does yunque mean in spanish?

"Yunque" means "anvil" in Spanish. It is a heavy metal block on which metals are shaped by hammering.


What word means be of use?

A word that means, be of use would be; helpful, useful, needed


There is safety in number What does it means?

safety number


What does bioteknologi translate to in English?

The Indonesian word 'bioteknologi' translates in English to 'biotechnology', which sounds roughly the same in both languages. The word means the use of living systems and organisms to develop useful products.


What is SUPW?

SUPW means 'Socially Useful Product Work'.


What the term data means?

data means information useful or useless for us


What is the spanish word for safety?

seguridad means safety and also security


How is consumer safety connected with product liability?

The term product liability basically means that companies who make products available for to the public are responsible if they in any way harm or cause injuries. So, product liability takes into account the consumer safety of it's product.


What is 'martello' when translated from Italian to English?

"Hammer" or "I'm hammering" may be English equivalents of "martello."Specifically, the masculine singular noun "martello" means "hammer." Its singular definite article is "il" ("the"), and its singular indefinite article is "un, uno" ("a, one"). As the first person singular present indicative of the infinitive "martellare," "martello" means "(I) am hammering, do hammer, hammer."But regardless of the meaning, the pronunciation remains the same: "mahr-TEHL-loh."