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The only consonant to appear in both words "moving" and "train" is "n".

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9y ago
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4d ago

The same consonants in the words "moving" and "train" are "n" and "m".

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Q: What are the same consonants in the words moving and train?
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how would an observer on train a witch is moving at nearly the speed of light view o'clock on train be which is moving at the same speed and in the same direction?

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If a train is speeding down a railroad track at a speed of 50 miles per hour. From whose reference point is the train not moving?

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If you are riding on a train that speeds past another train moving in the same direction on an adjacent track it appears that the other train is moving backward. why?

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Can the train appear to be rest at rest while moving?

Yes and no. All motion is relative. When you say you are moving you mean in relation to something else. If are on the train and you choose something that moving alongside you at the same speed (another train for instance) then you are not moving relative to that, however you are moving in relation to the countryside. Both trains are moving in relation to a cow in the field.


Why you stay at same place when you jump in moving train or bus?

When you are inside a moving train or bus, you are moving at the same speed as that train or bus, and you have the same momentum, so even when you jump, and are no longer in contact with the floor, your existing momentum will carry you along with the vehicle, under normal circumstances. If you happen to jump at a time with the train or bus is changing the speed or direction of its travel, however, you will find that you do not stay in the same place, with respect to the train or bus. You need to have solid contact with the vehicle for its own changes of motion to alter your own motion.


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This sounds like a joke question. If you toss a coin in a train, it lands in the train. If you toss it out the window, or otherwise off the train, it lands on whatever is out there. On the other hand, assuming this is not a joke, the coin will land where it would if you tossed it if the train were stationary. In other words, the coin is moving at the same velocity as the train before the coin toss, and since that part of its momentum is preserved through the toss, it will land, relative to the train, in the same place. This assumes, of course, that the train is not changing speed during the coin toss, that the windows are not admitting a wind, and so on.


What is the word for poetic use of words with the same vowel but different consonants?

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