Presumably the question is what are the Roman numerals IX and X?
If so then they are 9 and 10 respectively.
Yes, except the CN X nerve, the CN IX, the CN VII, and the CN III nerve have the parasympathetic nerve
Let t1 and t2 be the times for the two stages. Then t1 = x/v1 and t2 = x/v2 Total distance = x + x = 2x Total time = t1 + t2 = x/v1 + x/v2 = x*(1/v1 + 1/v2) Average velocity = total distance / total time = 2x divided by x/(1/v1 + 1/v2) = 2(1/v1 + 1/v2) which is the Harmonic mean of v1 and v2.
There are two types of hemophilia. Type A: A mutation in the factor VIII gene. Type B: A mutation in the IX gene.
What is the value of the smallest objective?If it is 4x,The total magnification = eye piece x objective lens= (10x) x (4x)= 40x
# of immigrants/ total population x 1000
X. IX is 9, so X is 10.
Boxing a value x is to put it in a class type rather than its primitive one. Ex. int x = 3; Integer Ix = x; // boxing x
if you give the bord in class X then the marks of class IX will not effect but if you will give normal school based xam then it will effect
The Roman numeral before X is IX.
-ix
Some of the good books for geography are:1. Certificate Physical and Human Geography(New Oxford Progressive Geography)by Goh Cheng Leong(Oxford)2. Human and Economic Geographyby Gillian C. Morgan and Goh Cheng(Oxford)3. Certificate Regional Geography: Monsoon Asia(New Oxford Progressive Geography S.)by Goh Cheng Leong(Oxford)4. GCSE Geography (in focus)by Widdenson, Smith, Knill(John Murray)5. A Complete Course In Certificate Geography For Class IX/X Vol.1 & 2by V.N. Nigam (Pitambar)6. General Principles of World Geographyby Charles Farro (General Printers & Publishers)7. Monsoon Aisaby Charles Farro (General Printers & Publishers)8. Certificate Physical and Human Geographyby Dr. Manosi Lahiri (Oxford)9. The New Reading Tropical Mapsby R B Bunnet (Longman)10. General Geography in Diagrams (Fourth GCSE Edition)by R B Bunnet (Longman/Pearson Education)11. Geography for GCSEby J. Pallister, A Bowen, R. Clay, C Di Landro & O. Phillipson (Longman)12. Total Geography -- Class IX & Xby Jasmine Rachel, Dolly Ellen Sequeira (Morning Star/Beeta Pub.)- Rajeev
Some of the good books for geography are:1. Certificate Physical and Human Geography(New Oxford Progressive Geography)by Goh Cheng Leong(Oxford)2. Human and Economic Geographyby Gillian C. Morgan and Goh Cheng(Oxford)3. Certificate Regional Geography: Monsoon Asia(New Oxford Progressive Geography S.)by Goh Cheng Leong(Oxford)4. GCSE Geography (in focus)by Widdenson, Smith, Knill(John Murray)5. A Complete Course In Certificate Geography For Class IX/X Vol.1 & 2by V.N. Nigam (Pitambar)6. General Principles of World Geographyby Charles Farro (General Printers & Publishers)7. Monsoon Aisaby Charles Farro (General Printers & Publishers)8. Certificate Physical and Human Geographyby Dr. Manosi Lahiri (Oxford)9. The New Reading Tropical Mapsby R B Bunnet (Longman)10. General Geography in Diagrams (Fourth GCSE Edition)by R B Bunnet (Longman/Pearson Education)11. Geography for GCSEby J. Pallister, A Bowen, R. Clay, C Di Landro & O. Phillipson (Longman)12. Total Geography -- Class IX & Xby Jasmine Rachel, Dolly Ellen Sequeira (Morning Star/Beeta Pub.)- Rajeev
X in French is spelled "X". It is pronounced as "eeks" in French.
The Roman numerals IX mean 9 in Hindu-Arabic numbers. I is 1 and X is 10. When the I is in front of the X, it means to subtract the I from the X.
It is: X-XXX-IX because X = 10, 30 = XXX and 09 = IX
If you mean IX, IV and X then the given Roman numerals are equivalent to 9, 4 and 10 respectively
The answer is relatively simple if you know hyperbolic functions. Suppose x is real so that ix is an imaginary number. Then tanh x = -i*tan(ix) So tan(ix) = (tanh x )/-i = i*tanh x = i * sinh x/csh x = i*(ex - e-x)/(ex + e-x) = i*(1 - e-2x)/(1 + e-2x)