Toasted cheese
Yes. Both the rabbit and the fox have been introduced to Australia, and both have caused massive damage since their arrival.
There were never any. Wales has been ruled by the English Monarchy since 1284 and has been a principality of England since 1301 and is still the world's largest principality. You could be referring to Geoffrey of Monmouth who was "King of Cymru" but this is mostly legend.
As principal ballerina in 2006 and from ballet in toto on 08 June 2007, She has since toured to rave reviews with Welsh opera singer Katherine Jenkins.
If you mean the ancient Britons who were native to the Roman province of Britannia, they did not speak Welsh. They spoke a Celtic language known today as Brythonic or Brittonic, and they were a people who called themselves Pritani or Britani probably from the early Bronze age onwards.This language is the ancestor of Welsh and Cornish (Kernowek) but there are many linguistic differences.When the Roman Empire withdrew its support for the province of Britannia and all military and political structure collapsed, the migrating Saxons, Jutes, Angles, Wends, Frisians, Franks and others who arrived on these shores gradually pushed many of the native population towards the west, into Wales and Cornwall.Here their Brythonic language slowly evolved into Welsh and Cornish, but Welsh as a separate language did not exist before about 550 AD ("primitive welsh"), becoming Old Welsh by the 9th century AD.So ancient Britons could not have spoken Welsh, since it did not exist at that time.English...............................Brythonic.............................Welshriver....................................abona.................................afonwater..................................dubro..................................dŵrborder.................................canto-.................................cantfire.......................................taneto................................tânjourney...............................sent, hent...........................hyntwhite...................................wen....................................gwynyew tree..............................ebor....................................efwr
why not? it's just another form of meat...
"Gwyllt" It's been a while since I spoke Welsh to anyone though...
Yes. This will form part of operating expense classified under non manufacturing cost since this is not directly attributable to the product.
There is no native Welsh word for "curry". Not surprising, since it is not a native dish. In Welsh it is therefore imported as a loan word from the English, so it is pronounced the same as in English and written in its phonetic Welsh form "cyri".
Salary for the candidate would not be an expense since the candidate does not receive a salary.
Salary for the candidate would not be an expense since the candidate does not receive a salary.
Salary for the candidate would not be an expense since the candidate does not receive a salary.
Expenses which are incurred for the selling of product is called Selling Expenses while expenses incurred on administration of general day to day tasks are called administration expenses
In accounting the "installation" if you are referring to the cost of having something installed is an expense and is recorded as such, that is an operating expense and is recorded as such. Since it is an expense it is not an actual asset, so can not be depreciated.
Parasites are animals that live only at the expense of others; since they cannot thrive on their own, they use other animals as a host. Parasites are animals that live only at the expense of others; since they cannot thrive on their own, they use other animals as a host.
I once gave my rabbit a Cheez-It... and part of a croissant. But you could give him/her a grape, since it is rather sweet. My rabbit loves grapes ;)
Since the summer of 2006
Welsh :-) The "ancient Britons" who occupied most of Britain at the time of the Roman invasion, were the ancestors of the modern Welsh and spoke an earlier form of Welsh. The name of Caratacus, who led a rebellion against Roman rule, has survived as the modern Welsh name Caradog. So the Welsh have been in Britain, speaking something like Welsh, since some centuries BC.; the English arrived during the 5th century AD.