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the answer is homologous
Same shapes, probably.
Yes providing they have the same sides and same angles
The answer is in the question! The orientation is the same as the preimage! Same = Not different.
Figures that have the same size are congruent, and the ones that have the same shape are similar.
No. They mean the same thing.
The British army and the Turkish army has the same strength
The British and French had some 250,000 casualties, the Turkish lost about the same number of men.
There is not different spelling in Turkish for the name Leyla. It is same.
Turkish uses the same alphabet as English, so it would be Perihan.
14ct is a US standard of fineness, and is more readily available there than in the UK. To see if your ring is 14ct/14k there will be a hallmark bearing the number 585 on the inside (shank) of the ring, however, it may say 14k, depending on the standards of hallmarking in US. Usually it should say 585.If your ring does not bear this number, then it most likely is not gold.If it bears other numbers, however, you can find out its internationally recognised fineness for gold below:375 = 9ct/K (Standard minimum in UK)417 = 10ct/K (Standard minimum in US)585 = 14ct/K (Standard US)750 = 18ct/K (Standard)916 = 22ct/K999 = 24ct/K (Minimum for Pure gold)If its a white metal, it could be Silver or Platinum. There are varied fineness' available but the ones used in jewellery more often than not are;925 = Sterling Silver950 = PlatinumWhite gold would be the same as the generic gold chart.
Yes, Turkish people were in the Ottoman empire.
is possible for turkish embassy to give visa on the same day
no
No
'I'm' and 'I' are the same word in the Turkish language. It's 'Ben'. Yes, it's pronounced exactly like the name. To be more precise there is not "to be" in Turkish language.
Yes, if you are driving on the Turkish side you will need to buy separate car insurance on the Turkish side. Same game goes with anyone going from the Greek to Turkish side.