bear
This is how you spell it " East Coast" if you already know how east then you don't know how to spell coast spell cost then just put "a" before the s and next to the o
The correct spelling is expensive (costly, pricey).
That is the correct spelling of "free" (unhindered, or without cost).
leviathan because its 1030 damage, 70 accuracy, removes 2 positive charms, but cost 8 pips
to cost: coûter, the cost: le coût
No, he reduces their generic mana cost. A White spell will have its cost reduced by one generic mana, as will a Blue spell. A spell that is both white and blue will have its cost reduced by 2. However Augustin does not affect the coloured mana that the spell needs. So a spell that costs 2WU normally will still cost WU.
bear
Learn to spell ¬_¬
You pay X colourless mana, where X is the converted mana cost of the target spell. Converted mana cost is just a number, it doesn't take into account the colours it is counting. So if you were trying to negate Lightning Bolt, the converted mana cost is '1', meaning you would pay 1 Blue and 1 colourless for a Spell Blast targeting it.
This is how you spell it " East Coast" if you already know how east then you don't know how to spell coast spell cost then just put "a" before the s and next to the o
spell check your answer
"Cost" as a noun is "costa". The plural is "costas". As a verb "to cost", it is "costar". "¿Cuánto cuesta?" means "How much does it cost?"
Spell check
Spell Blast says X is the target spell's 'converted mana cost' which is the sum of all the mana at the top right of a card. Any additional or alternate costs are ignored, so for Ith, High Arcanist, spell blast needs to pay U, + 7, even though Ith has a suspend cost of WU, and Suspend itself casts the card without paying the mana cost.
A creature that can be kicked will have either a Kicker cost or a Multikicker cost. These are additional costs, paid when the creature spell is cast. If you paid the kicker cost, when the spell resolves, the creature is considered to have been kicked, and will gain any applicable effects.
The correct spelling is "economy" (cost efficiency, or an economic system).