this is ancient Aramaic for messiah eashoa what will it mean with the ' at the end of the names instead msheekha' eashoa' instead of stating only msheekha eashoa.
When lawyers write "in lieu," they typically mean "in place of" or "instead of." It indicates that something is being done as a substitute or alternative for something else.
it means that u write with ur right hand instead of ur left
This means that you should write your answer using fractional notation as opposed to decimal notation. For example, you would write 1/4 instead of .25 .
it means that instead of having (2x-3)2 you write 4x2-12x+9
Answer write the end in Chinesedo you mean at the end of a film the appeared word''THE END''on the screen?In Chinese film it is put a word ''完''or ''剧终''instead of ''THE END''
It is an elaborate way of stating something and it is usally unclear. Ex. (per John M. Lannon:Technical Communication 11th ed) 1) As per your request - instead write: As you requested 2) Contingent upon receipt of - instead write: As soon as we receive
Phonetic spellers spell words the way they sound to the speller, regardless of how the dictionary may spell them. For example, a phonetic speller might write rite instead of write or right.
If you mean "How do you write in the third person," you just don't use pronouns. Like, if your name is john you say "John walked to the store," instead of, "I walked to the store."
"In lieu of" is another way of saying "instead of" as is, "the offender has been sentanced to community service in lieu of jail time."
Yes The only trouble is there is no such thing as the Gospel of James in the Bible. If you mean the Epistle of James instead then the answer is yes.
The order of modifiers makes no difference; they mean exactly the same thing.
I'm not sure if you intended to write "hagana" instead of "agana": agana (××’× ×”Ö¼) = "her pelvis" or "her bowl" hagana (×”×’× ×”) = "defense"