Before reading a text, you can use the 5 W's (who, what, when, where, why) to gather background information. Identify the author (who), the main topic (what), the time period (when), the setting (where), and the purpose of the text (why) to help orient yourself and set the context for understanding the material.
The 5 ws are: who what why when where.
Who? What? Where? When? Why? (and the 1 H is How?)
Top 5 teams Most World Series titlesNew York Yankees - 27 WS titlesSt. Louis Cardinals - 10 WS titlesOakland Athletics - 9 WS titlesBoston Red Sox - 7 WS titlesLos Angeles Dodgers - 6 WS titles
You do 3 divided by 5.
there's only one w in tower.
As of the 2008 playoffs: 1) Chicago Cubs - last WS win 1908 2) Cleveland Indians - last WS win 1948 3) San Francisco Giants - last WS win 1954 as the New York Giants 4) Texas Rangers - entered the AL in 1961 as the Washington Senators and have never won a WS 5) Houston Astros - entered the NL in 1962 as the Houston Colt 45s and have never won a WS
Identification division. program-id.temperature11. environment division. data division. working-storage section. 77 ws-a pic 9(3)v9(2). 77 ws-b pic 9(3)v9(2). procedure division. main-para. display " enter degree temperature ". accept ws-a. compute ws-b rounded = ( 9/5 * ws-a ) + 32. display " temperature in fahrenheit celsius " ws-b. stop run..
Maris played for the Yankees from 1960 to 1966.
1) Pat Borders - 1992 WS MVP with the Toronto Blue Jays. 2) Rick Dempsey - 1983 WS MVP with the Baltimore Orioles. 3) Steve Yeager - 1978 co WS MVP with the Los Angeles Dodgers. 4) Donn Clendenon - 1969 WS MVP with the New York Mets. 5) Larry Sherry - 1959 WS MVP with the Los Angeles Dodgers. 6) Don Larsen - 1956 WS MVP with the New York Yankees.
they are in their second stage :)
The passcode to play stage 5 is 028431. The passcode to play stage 6 is 524383.
If the water content of the steam is 5% by mass, then the steam is said to be 95% dry and has a dryness fraction of 0.95.Dryness fraction can be expressed as:ζ = ws / (ww + ws) (1)whereζ = dryness fractionww = mass of water (kg, lb)ws = mass of steam (kg, lb)GAJANAN Nalegaonkar