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Due to the way paper is made, its fibers tend to run in one direction. If you tear in that direction, along the fibers, the paper tears easily, and the fibers guide the tear to be straight across. If you tear the paper across the fibers, all of the above is untrue.
Fold the paper along the line where you want to cut, lick the crease several times, fold the paper the other way and repeat, and then finally tear.
The answer will depend on the currency and the person doing the folding - you will find it quite difficult to fold coinage!Currency notes are made with different qualities of paper - many have textile fibres in them and their resistance to tering will depend on the exact make-up of the paper. Furthermore, some countries (Australia, for example) have plastic notes which are far more resistant to tearing because of folding.
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Of course. Just like you can tear a 100-acre sheet of paper into two 50-acre pieces.
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It means ' tear's rainbow'. Tear as in crying, not the one breaking a piece of paper, etc.
This is not a question this is a fragment. Ask something like 'Does a piece of paper help you to write' or 'Does a piece of paper rip or tear easliy?' When asking questions you have to be more specific.
You can cut it and tear it up
Tearing a piece of paper is a physical change.
Tear a a long, small piece of toilet paper. Then, once the barbie is SURLEY dead, wrap her body in it.
I use pine shavings and tear up a piece of paper towel. He loves it :)
Yes, the word "tear" can be used as both a noun and a verb. Noun: a hole or a split in a solid material caused by tearing, or a drop of liquid that comes from your eye when you cry. Verb: to split a solid material by pulling two pieces apart to destroy (holding a piece of paper in two places and pulling to tear it apart or tear a piece off); to rip.
Tear. As in I will tear that paper. Not the tear that involves crying.
because his mommy droped him on his head when he was born
Due to the way paper is made, its fibers tend to run in one direction. If you tear in that direction, along the fibers, the paper tears easily, and the fibers guide the tear to be straight across. If you tear the paper across the fibers, all of the above is untrue.
Tear, as in to tear some paper, has the past tense of tore.