Line Graph
*American English *British English *Australian English *Filipino English
they are different kinds of we of communication one of that is how we communicate eachother most especially our language we use and how we pronounce it correctly
The correct syntax would be "different kinds of fuel".
The simple subject is kinds, not orchids. The word orchids is part of a prepositional phrase, so it is not the simple subject.
italic.bold.strickethrough.!
Smart Art is provides the facility to create a variety of charts, like organisational charts, flow charts etc. These charts are specialised, and customisable. So it is usually specialist users that will use a lot of them, though anyone can use them.
go to the parent and teacher store and get the photographs of the GRAPH
Some common types of graphs used in science include line graphs to show trends over time, bar graphs to compare different categories, scatter plots to display relationships between variables, and pie charts to represent parts of a whole. Choosing the appropriate graph depends on the data being presented and the message that needs to be conveyed.
circle graphs
There are many different kinds of charts. A few would be a graph, bar graph, flow charts, pie charts, pictograph, line graphs, histogram, dot plot, and scatterplot.
There are four main types of intonation patterns in English: falling intonation (used for statements), rising intonation (used for questions), fall-rise intonation (used for uncertainty or surprise), and rise-fall intonation (used for lists or contrast). Intonation helps convey meaning and attitude in spoken language.
Anyone who uses a spreadsheet can make use of graphs. They give a visual representation of data, often making it easier to understand. There are different kinds of graphs for different purposes, so different people can find graphs that are suitable for their needs. So they could be people involved in finance or they could be statisticians or mathematicians or business people, or students or people doing work at home for personal use.
Linear and Exponetional.
Affixation in English includes prefixes (e.g. "un-" in "undo"), suffixes (e.g. "-ness" in "kindness"), and infixes (e.g. "freakin'" as an informal infix for emphasis). Each type of affixation changes the meaning or grammatical function of a word.
Many kinds of information can be shown on maps and graphs. Geography, population, pronunciation differences, income, age, religion... almost anything.
Keys, compass, and data
stop asking me questions omg