You answer whatever he asked. If he is your ex, then it doesn't matter, you can still be friends, unless you broke up for a really bad reason.
If you wrote the question exactly as you meant it, then I would write 50,000 . If you meant to write "five ten-thousandths", then I would write 0.0005 .
The content Is just what ever you or someone else wrote in the email. like if u sent someone an email that said hi the content would be "hi"
Pssst. I think you just wrote it.
Emails are really impersonable and it is best if you actually talk with him. If you have to write him remember there is a hard copy of it in case you do not want someone else reading it for some reason. Simply tell him how you feel, what you want and what you think.
Would like to get the email address of the author Andrew Smith who wrote the book Moondust
The present tense of "wrote" is "write."
John Lennon wrote In His Own Write.
You can find a transitive verb of incomplete predication, when you do not have the Direct Object. I mean, when the DO is hidden. For ex: "He wrote me". You can ask: What did he write? And you can answer: a letter, an email, etc... He: Subject wrote me: Predicate wrote: Main Verb / Transitive Verb of Incomplete Predication me: Indirect Object In this sentence you do not have the DO (a letter, an email, etc)... so the pattern verb is TVIP.
Actually, you already wrote it in decimal form.
0.0025 of a ton
The homophone for the past tense of write is "wrote," pronounced as "rote."
Today we write 1554 in Roman numerals as MDLIV But the ancient Romans would have wrote it as MDLIIII