you can't
You use them to see lasers.
Hi, this is Saeed Aqeeli the answer to your question porto-clinic glare is a stronge light truned on dirctelly to a parson makes him or her loss his vistion for 7 seconde.
Hi, this is Saeed Aqeeli the answer to your question porto-clinic glare is a stronge light truned on dirctelly to a parson makes him or her loss his vistion for 7 seconde.
The vestibular organs, the eyes and the brain are the body organs that control the body's vision.
"Explain this" is actually "You explain this" or some form of that phrase. As such, "You" is the [understood] subject and "explain" is action requested, i.e. the verb. Or another way of saying it is "explain" IS the verb, "explanation" is the noun, as in "You please explain the written explanation to me.' or simply "Explain it to me Lucy".
Explain RAM? Explain RAM?
explain
i think it depends on WHERE you explain it and WHO you explain it to.
What does "explain" mean? To "explain" something is to tell in detail what something means.
Explain is present tense. I/We/You/They explain He/She/It explains The present participle is explaining.
Topic Sentence * 1st Supporting detail/reason/fact * Explain * Explain * 2nd Supporting detail/reason/fact * Explain * Explain * 3rd Supporting detail/reason/fact * Explain * Explain Conclusion
No, the word "explain" is not present tense. "Explain" is the base form of the verb, and it can be used in various tenses like present ("I explain"), past ("I explained"), or future ("I will explain").