LTD is pretty much only used for limited liability companies. For example, Lucasfilm Ltd.
Instead of saying, what wrong with you. Try saying, what is wrong with you. When dating it is a good idea to try to use good grammar, it gives the appearance of intelligence.
When part of a company's legal name, Ltd. stands for "Limited" and implies that the business is an incorporated company having some form of share structure. The "limited" derives from the provincial, state, or federal law(s) regarding incorporation of companies which provide a limited liability to the directors and shareholders of a company. An incorporated company of limited liability is treated as its own legal entity separate from its directors, shareholders, and employees.Generally speaking, companies using Ltd. in their legal name may be either public companies or private companies. The use of "Inc.", abbreviated from "incorporated", is generally synonymous with Ltd. in indicating an incorporated company.LLC's (Limited Liability Companies) typically fall under different regulations and statutes than incorporate companies regarding the liabilities held by the directors and shareholders.
They use it because its easier to use then km. (ps. sorry if the answer is wrong, I'm not to smart......)
On some clocks they use IIII instead of IV and VIIII instead of IX. They are not really wrong, just not the common way. See the link below for an excellent answer to the question.
Use: erroneous / false / incorrect / inexact / mistaken / out (out of...) / unsatisfactory / untrue.
I'm from Barbados and we use "you" instead of "your" when speaking Bajan Dialect; e.g. You got on you shoes wrong!
Third person limited is almost the same as first person, only you use the third person pronouns he/she/it/they instead of I. You use that POV when you want to be inside the head of the narrator and show his or her emotions and thoughts, but nobody else's.
How about restricted, restrained, bounded, confined, throttled, controlled, held, contained, checked, curbed, moderated
Corn flour is quite different to regular flour and most recipies will fail if you use the wrong type of flour.
it depends on the food that you're going to make because it could affect the food if you use the wrong ingredient or substitute.
Use companies house at www.companieshouse.gov.uk