NO If you go back to driving a manual vehicle
you will get almighty problems.
It is far safer just to use your right foot on the pedals.
Absolutely not. When first learning to drive a manual transmission, your legs may become tired after driving for a while, but within a week of driving, you will no longer notice this fatigue.
Yes, pictures of lions show left forefoot and right hindfoot off the ground simultaneously, which is the trot pattern. Tigers "pace" instead, by moving both left legs together, then both right legs.
Which hand drive it is doesn't matter, as both left and right drive have the same pedal arrangement. Driving a car with a manual gearbox require two functional legs, so that's probably not a good idea. But driving a car with an auto tranny should be readily doable with only one useful leg.
Bilateral in medical terminology basically means "both", so bilateral feet would be both feet. The "bi" means two. Unilateral would mean one, such as unilateral hand pain on the left or right, but not both hands. Hope this was helpful! RG
15 radical 2
you're not right in the head.
432180. The legs are 441 and 1960.
well ronaldo uses both legs but he uses the right leg more
You can't. The hypotenuse alone isn't enough to tell you anything about the lengths of the legs. There are an infinite number of different right triangles that all have the same hypotenuse but different legs.
The hypotenuse is the longest side of any right triangle, and the legs are the two legs coming out from where the right angle is.
Oscar Pistorius at the age of eleven had both legs amputated due to being born with fibular hemimelia in both legs since both legs lacked a fibula .
If both legs of a right triangle are the same, then it forms what is known as a "45-45-90 triangle". In this type of triangle, the hypotenuse is always √2 times more than the legs. So in this problem, with legs 3cm and 3cm, the hypotenuse is 3√2cm, or 4.243cm