Count each blade of grass in a 1cm x 1cm square. Then, measure the length and width of the paddock. Let's say it's 100m x 100m. This is in effect 10,000 x 10,000cm, which is 100,000,000cm squared. Just multiply the result from the 1cm x 1cm count and you've got a fairly accurate estimate as to how many grass blades there might be.
This would be impossible to count every single field, also large open hills like the pennines would be seen as fields, and they are impossible to count alone.
No way, it does not count.
Yes, So the farmer who owned the field could count them Quickly, One Black shhep was placed per Hundred regulars,
Field-Marshal Count von Waldersee - 1902 was released on: USA: November 1902
Could it be the Olympics.
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Only if they make it. If they make it; it counts as a field goal attempt and a field goal make. If it is missed, it does not count as a missed field goal.
As a geologist I use these terms interchageably. If you want to be more precise, "field work" could refer to every visit to the area subject of study. All the data collected from several "field work" campains result on a "field study". "Field research" could be more generic, and interchangeable for any of the other two.
Yes, every field is an integral domain.
the forest and the field technically three/four because of the open area with the cornucopia, and even the lake could count as one
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The cast of Field-Marshal Count von Waldersee - 1902 includes: Alfred von Waldersee as himself