That means if you are a kid then you need to tell your parents about your problem. And maybe they will fix your problem or maybe not. But if you are a aldult then tell the house owner what you do not like about the house. Or whats wrong about it. And that's what you should do if your room has no room.
Q: Why was the mushroom invited to a party? A: He was a fungi (fun guy). Q: Why did the fungi leave the party immediately after arriving? A: It was crowded and there wasn't mushroom. Q: What room has no doors, no walls, no floor and no ceiling? A: A mushroom. Q: What room can be eaten? A: A mushroom! Q: What do mushrooms eat as they gather around a campfire? A: S'pores.
B&q
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Will_22_inch_rims_and_tires_fit_on_a_1996_Mercury_Marquis There's not enough room under the fenders. http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Will_22_inch_rims_and_tires_fit_on_a_1996_Mercury_Marquis
B & q
B&q i have it in terracotta
Q. May i have some ice cream? A. Did you clean your room?
The formula for heat loss calculations for a room is typically given by: Q = U * A * (Ti-To), where Q is the heat loss (in watts), U is the overall heat transfer coefficient (in W/m^2°C), A is the surface area of the room (in m^2), Ti is the inside temperature (in °C), and To is the outside temperature (in °C).
Statements mean nothing to the validity of truth tables. However p and q must be statements - something that can be declared true or false. Example: a statement could be "There are clouds in the sky over my head right now." A statement could not be "A cloudy day is dreary" -- that is subjective (maybe true to you but not necessarily to me). That said the truth tables look at comparing all possible combinations of truth values for both statements: p could be true and q could be true, or p could be true and q could be false, or p could be false and q could be true, or p could be false and q could be false. Then you can look at the if p then q (p arrow q) truth values. Consider the If-then statements most teens hear: If you clean your room, then you can take the car out on Friday. The Parent is considered lying if they don't let you take the car out even though you cleaned your room. If you don't clean your room, the "then" part of the conditional statement does not matter -- logically then if p is not true, the conditional is considered true regardless of the value of q. table looks like p | q | p -> q T | T | T (you clean your room and you do get to take the car on Friday) T | F | F (you clean your room and you don't get to take the car on Friday) F | T | T (you don't clean your room - the rest doesn't matter) F | F | T The table for p begets not q is almost the same. Start with the same two first columns, add a column for not q (~q); then add a column to evaluate the conditional. Only this time your parent said something like "If you fail your Geometry quiz, then you can NOT go to the party on Saturday". They only lied to you if you failed your quiz and they still let you go to the party.
This Q needs more info, sorry
Q: How do you make a Freudian slip? A: Leave a banana skin outside his consulting room.
It is Q*Q*Q*Q or Q^4 - whatever Q is.
I don't know if there is room for that many, but here are a few: Q: What do you call a bears without ears? A: B's Q: What's a bees favorite novel? A: The Great Gats-bee! Q: What do you get if you cross a bee with a door bell? A: A hum dinger! Q: Who is the bees favorite singer? A: Sting! Q: Who is the bees favorite pop group? A: The bee gees! Q: What is a bee's favorite part of a relationship? A: The Honeymoon period. Q: What did the sushi say to the bee? A: Wassabee! Q: What do you call a bee that can't stop eating? A: Chub-bee. Q: What kind of bee is a sore loser? A: a cryba-bee Q: Who protects the Queen Bee? A: Her Hub-bee. Q: How many bees do you need in a bee choir? A: A humdred!