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To use real objects in teaching, one should use them as examples. If a person is trying to teach about bugs, use an actual bug. This can help with hands on learning.
Use is present. Used is past. The correct sentence is, This is used for....
It is used to heat / burn objects.
Compare their weights on scale's have to select scales depending on the size of the objects to find a objects density divide the objects mass by its volume.
You could use a magnet to separate a collection of metal objects from a tomb. Iron object and other ferrous metals will stick to the magnet while some other types of metals will not.
Machines are inanimate. Machines do not eat, sleep, rest, breathe, and they do not have a heart beat. Machines are just objects, inanimate objects for the use of humans.
People use electricity; inanimate objects or substances (such as ammonia) don't.
Inanimate objects are neither good or bad, they are just objects. People are good or bad and use objects in either good or bad ways.
This is an inanimate object.
Rocks are inanimate objects and therefore can not use anything. However all rocks can be subject to the processes of erosion once they are elevated to intersect the Earth's surface.
It is called echolocation. They hear sounds which "bounce" off inanimate objects (cave walls etc......) and they are naot blind.
the word car is inanimate. source: www.yahoo.com/dictionary
yes it can. Yes, you can use a bowl of soup as a crystal ball. You can use anything that focuses your concentration as a crystal ball. Fortune telling ability is in the mind, not in inanimate objects.
"He and I met yesterday" is correct. Subjects use the nominative case (I, we, he, she) while objects use the objective case (me, us, him, her).
objects whose properties are different instance datamember n member function are use for that
Although fossils are inanimate, they hold many clues to life on Earth millions of years ago.
"These" is used to refer to items that are nearby or close in proximity, while "those" is used to refer to objects that are farther away or not within immediate reach. For example, you would say "I like these shoes" when referring to shoes that you can touch or see up close, and "I don't like those shirts" when talking about shirts that are located further away or not in your immediate vicinity.