It mean it is not very wide
A homophone for "narrow passageway" put into a horizontal position is "aisle" (I'll).
Strait is the homophone for straight. It means a narrow passage of water.
The homophone for direct, not crooked, narrow, natural channel of water is "strait."
The homophone for "direct" is "dye rect", and for "narrow" it is "narrow". A natural channel of water is called a "creek".
Strait is the homophone for straight. It means a narrow passage of water.
The homophone of "skull" is "scull," which refers to a narrow, light racing boat used in rowing.
Strait is the homophone for straight. It means a narrow passage of water.
straight, strait
The homophone for "direct" is "dye rect", and for "narrow" it is "narrow". A natural channel of water is called a "creek".
straight, strait
Strait is the homophone for straight. It means a narrow passage of water.
straight, strait
straight, strait
straight, strait
The homophone for direct, not crooked, narrow, natural channel of water is "strait."
Stems can grow narrow, vertical, thick, and horizontal... I would check this answer online...
Flat, narrow fields stepping up the slope, horizontal tillage [ 90 degrees to the slope of the hillside ].
its not the equation that matters it is how you map it out on the graph, the vertical and horizontal axis are interchangeable. For example if x is the vertical axis and y is the horizontal axis the graph would look different than if y was the vertical axis and x was the horizontal axis. The narrow and wide of a graph depend on the horizontal axis ( how quickly the numbers increase and or how far apart the markers are spaced) ...If the intervals are counted by 5 the graph would be wider than if the intervals were counted by 500.