38% of one pound £
38p
38p
75% is the same as 0.75 times 50p = 37.5 which can be rounded to 38p
38 adp + 38p + c6h12o6 + 6o2 ------> 6co2 + 6h2o + 38 atp
There are 201 ways.
in a pub i went in though still 16 at the time the duke William mabgate leeds was 38p bitter an 40p larger
There are 201 ways and I regret that I do not have the will to list them. One of each coin or 38 of 1p coins are the 2 extremes.
For a standard envelope containing .3 ounces, the cost is $0.94 (as of May 30, 2008).
I can't remember how much they used to cost, but at the moment they cost from 85p to £1.20 (in my experience). 500ml of fizzy drinks (pop) werer averaging 38p
ADP (adenosine diphosphate) + P (another phosphate group) ---usable energy--> ATP (Adenosine triphoshate)
51 stands for the model of the Plane. The P stands for the series of planes example: P-40P-47P-38P-51The number i dentifies the specific plane. Planes are also updated or improved, so they put in letters example: P-51 B, P-51 D, P-51 H, ect.I believe the P in P-51 stand for "Pursuit" such as B in B-25 stands for Bomber.
THe Royal Mail now charge a "surcharge" at the recipients' doorstep for all mail "under paid" - which can be a large letter sent on a small letter stamp - essentially anything where the cost of sending has not been met by the sender - so it will be met by the recipient. The problem here is the surcharge is £1 min. So if (like i did with a friend of mine), send a birthday card and forget to stick a stamp on it... the cost would have been say 38p but the surcharge/fine is min £1. Ouch.