Yes. In general, "modeling" reflects American English (AE), while "modelling" reflects British English (BE).
SketchUp is a 3D modelling program for a broad range of applications such as architectural, civil, mechanical, film as well as video game design and available in free as well as professional versions.
Not in any American versions. In Japanese versions there are a couple cusses. In some versions of the manga there is also swearing, but it is a lot more extreme than the anime.
Where to buy American Media Inc. digest forum books
You can find data concerning various bible versions at the American bible society
This varies. The north American versions say it is the ill-fated billionaire Mr. Reginald (or John) Boddy, however, almost all the foreign versions say it is Dr. Black. The name varies by versions and editions.
Both Gabriel Tarde and Albert Bandura focused on the concept of modeling in social learning. Tarde emphasized imitation and social influence as mechanisms for behavior change, while Bandura introduced the idea of observational learning and the importance of cognitive processes in modeling. Both theories highlight the role of social interactions in shaping behavior, but Bandura's model incorporates more complexity by considering factors like attention, retention, reproduction, and motivation in the modeling process.
Yes, the Bible in the same for all Christian religions. Parts of the Bible are just interpreted differently. There may be slightly different specialized versions.
There are 2 American movies (The Ring and The Ring 2). There is also the Japanese movie (Ringu) that the American versions were based on.
Both. They have their own versions that they had to do for American Idol.
You can't legally. Wii's are region locked, which means you can only play North American versions of games on an American Wii.
There are THREE versions of the same song on American Werewolf in London. The movie opens with Blue Moon by Bobby Vinton (from his 1963 album Blue on Blue). The other two versions are by Sam Cooke and The Marcels
Neither the American or European versions of the scrabble dictionary recognize tz as a word