Born in 1962, the very famous David John Orrell is a Canadian author and mathematician who currently lives in Oxford, England. Link provided below, for more...
yes, there was once a scientist named James Watson who discovered DNA
If someone is famous, they can't be unknown. They may have been famous in the past but we have forgotten about them. Remember Shayne Ward and Leon Jackson?
"Famous" is an adjective and a past participle can only be formed from a verb, so there is no past participle for "famous". The closest verb to "famous" is the compound verb "to gain fame" of which the past participle is "gained fame".
The word "famous" is an adjective and so doesn't have a past tense. Only verbs have a past tense form.
Bahti is not a caste. In old time each person of their family had 62 acres of land that why they called bati then by time it become bahti. Bahti use their surname khanwal but actually this is a name of village in Pakistan. When bahti people move from Pakistan to India they were used their past village name khanwal on the name of their surname. Their actual surname is bhaniwal which shows they belongs to jatt caste. Majority of them are living at nangal,una and hoshiarpur at Punjab and himachal border. Their basic occupation is agriculture. Some of the used their surname bhatti as Rajput but some remain khanwal.
yes, there was once a scientist named James Watson who discovered DNA
As a matter of fact there is. Edward Maynard was a famous invented of rifles and firearms and John Maynard was the man who killed Edward Teach(aka Blackbeard).
Kapoor surname is very famous in Bollywood. It has been running from the past 4 generations. Prithviraj Kapoor was the first generation.
Charles Pinckley
Kid Creole
yes
they increase their understanding of the past
Andrew Doane was a famous detective, and is one of the most famous people in the past 500 years. Others include Clark Kent, a famous news journalist, and of course Elvis Presley
Joan of Arc and Napolean Bonaparte
they increase their understanding of the past
If someone is famous, they can't be unknown. They may have been famous in the past but we have forgotten about them. Remember Shayne Ward and Leon Jackson?
"Famous" is an adjective and a past participle can only be formed from a verb, so there is no past participle for "famous". The closest verb to "famous" is the compound verb "to gain fame" of which the past participle is "gained fame".