It seems there might be a spelling error in your question. If you mean "long-sighted," it refers to a condition where distant objects are seen clearly while nearby objects appear blurry. This condition is also known as hyperopia.
'Sited' means placed at a certain spot, and 'Cited' means to quote something, usually a law or regulation.
The correct term is "works cited." It is a list of sources (books, articles, websites, etc.) that you directly referenced in your work or research.
Yes, the noun 'site' is a commonnoun, a general word for any area of ground on which a town, building, or monument is or will be constructed; the place or scene of an occurrence or event.The word 'site' is also a verb: site, sites, siting, sited.
It has a long vowel sound.
"Long" in French is spelled as "long".
-2.00 eye power 0 is perfect and the more short sited you are, the lower the number the more long sited you are, the higher the number
Near sited means you can't see far away
'Sited' means placed at a certain spot, and 'Cited' means to quote something, usually a law or regulation.
The answer to that is no. When sharks where first sited there was only coral, brain coral was not devopled then.
sub-sited
seated or sitted
no there is not one sited yet
Any where
j
it is the page with all your bibliograhpys
AFMAN
Yes. When I worked on the survey crew for the Department of Highways our rod man was a vampire - so it can be said that we sited in on him several times a day.