I am not familiar with "horse isle," but ZVBXRPL is taken from the Marx Brother's movie A Day at the Races. They were a famous comedy group in the 1930s and 40s. ZVBXRPL, is a code for which horse to bet on in a race, which is how t is related to something with the name "horse isle."
B L P. Miller has written: 'Hydrodynamic drag of roughened circular cylinders'
p=a+b+c for a
p(rectangle)=2*(L+B) =2*(5+3) =16 L=length , B=breath p(rectangle)=2*(L+B) =2*(5+3) =16 L=length , B=breath
Property and liability (P & L) insurance
B. P. L. Moore has written: 'Serological and immunological methods' -- subject(s): Analysis, Blood, Immunohematology, Transfusion
I think you mean B. L. P. rather than B. P. L.Those are the initials of the coin's designer, Bela Lyon Pratt.
bala
Assuming 96 refers to the area of therectangle, the answer is: infinite. Consider the following sequence of rectangles with breadh B units and length L units.: Breadth = 1 Length = 96. Area = 96, Perimeter = 194 B= 0.1, L = 960. A = 96, P = 1920.2 B = 0.01, L =9600. A = 96, P = 19200.02 B = 0.001, L = 96000. A = 96, P = 192000.002 There is no limit to how small B can get and therefore, how large P can get.
ballroom
P=B×RB=P÷RR=P÷B
One solution: B L P R V Z (alphabetical) Another: Z V X L together, and B R P together (curves?) Another: Z V R L together, B X P together (non-plosive and plosive) Another: X, the others together (glottal, non-glottal) Another: Z V are fricative, the others are not
beauty : P Im UnwantedEmo on Horseisle