measurements are taken in a way that is the same every time. - apex
It would help answer this question f you mentioned which countries' pounds and dollars you meant. Without that information there is no way to give an answer.
If you say o.2 the way it's meant to be said, (two tenths) then it will be obvious that its 2/10.
If you do succeed in getting an answer posted here, how do you know what you've got ? You don't know anything about the person who posted it, and you have no idea whether he knows what he's talking about. How can you trust anything you get like that ? Are you just going to believe anything that anybody tells you ? The only way to get an answer you can trust is to work it out yourself. Oh, and by the way ... if you get the answer from somebody else, then you're no superstar. You're a fraud, a fake, and a cheat. But what do we know ? Maybe that's cool now.
For the 2, 4, 6, 8 times tables half it to 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 times table. MUCH Easier trust me!
Transitive trustA trust that can extend beyond two domains to other trusted domains in the forest.Intransitive trustA one way trust that does not extend beyond two domains.
one needs to make trust between the domains. please check below the different types of the trusts One-way trust One domain allows access to users on another domain, but the other domain does not allow access to users on the first domain. Two-way trust Two domains allow access to users on both domains. Trusting domain The domain that allows access to users from a trusted domain. Trusted domain The domain that is trusted; whose users have access to the trusting domain. Transitive trust A trust that can extend beyond two domains to other trusted domains in the forest. Intransitive trust A one way trust that does not extend beyond two domains. Explicit trust A trust that an admin creates. It is not transitive and is one way only. Cross-link trust An explicit trust between domains in different trees or in the same tree when a descendant/ancestor (child/parent) relationship does not exist between the two domains. Shortcut Joins two domains in different trees, transitive, one- or two-way Forest Applies to the entire forest. Transitive, one- or two-way Realm Can be transitive or nontransitive, one- or two-way External Connect to other forests or non-AD domains. Nontransitive, one- or two-way. Windows 2000 Server supports two-way transitive and one-way intransitive trusts. Administrators can create shortcuts. Windows Server 2003 the forest root trust. This trust can be used to connect Windows Server 2003 forests if they are operating at the 2003 forest functional level. Authentication across this type of trust is Kerberos based (as opposed to NTLM). Forest trusts are transitive for all the domains in the trusted forests. Forest trusts, however, are not transitive.
two-way transitive
child and parent domains
ISTG is responsible for this process
Tree-Root Trust or cross forest trust (windows server 2008 active directory)
two-way transitive for domain in the same forest
A domain as "a single security boundary of a Windows NT-based computer network. Active Directory is made up of one or more domains. On a standalone workstation, the domain is the computer itself. A domain can span more than one physical location. Every domain has its own security policies and security relationships with other domains. When multiple domains are connected by trust relationships and share a common schema, configuration, and global catalog, they constitute a domain tree. Multiple domain trees can be connected together to create a forest." Domain A Windows domain is a collection of security principals that share a central directory database. This central database (known as Active Directory starting with Windows 2000,[1] Active Directory Domain Services in Windows Server 2008 and Server 2008 R2, also referred to as NT Directory Services on Windows NT operating systems, or NTDS) contains the user accounts and security information for the resources in that domain. Each person who uses computers within a domain receives his or her own unique account, or user name. This account can then be assigned access to resources within the domain. In a domain, the directory resides on computers that are configured as "domain controllers." A domain controller is a server that manages all security-related aspects between user and domain interactions, centralizing security and administration. A Windows Server domain is generally suited for businesses and/or organizations when more than 10 PCs are in use. Trust To allow users in one domain to access resources in another, Active Directory uses trusts. Trusts inside a forest are automatically created when domains are created. The forest sets the default boundaries of trust, and implicit, transitive trust is automatic for all domains within a forest. Terminology One-way trust One domain allows access to users on another domain, but the other domain does not allow access to users on the first domain. Two-way trust Two domains allow access to users on both domains. Trusting domain The domain that allows access to users from a trusted domain. Trusted domain The domain that is trusted; whose users have access to the trusting domain. Transitive trust A trust that can extend beyond two domains to other trusted domains in the forest. Intransitive trust A one way trust that does not extend beyond two domains. Explicit trust A trust that an admin creates. It is not transitive and is one way only. Cross-link trust An explicit trust between domains in different trees or in the same tree when a descendant/ancestor (child/parent) relationship does not exist between the two domains. Shortcut Joins two domains in different trees, transitive, one- or two-way Forest Applies to the entire forest. Transitive, one- or two-way Realm Can be transitive or nontransitive, one- or two-way External Connect to other forests or non-AD domains. Nontransitive, one- or two-way.[18] Windows Server 2003 introduced the forest root trust. This trust can be used to connect Windows Server 2003 forests if they are operating at the 2003 forest functional level. Authentication across this type of trust is Kerberos based (as opposed to NTLM). Forest trusts are transitive for all the domains in the trusted forests. Forest trusts, however, are not transitive
trust is used for different domains we can log-in to different users this known as trust trust divided 3 types 1 one way incoming 2 one way outgoing 3 two way trust
You need a context to determine whether "ran" is transitive or intransitive. It is intransitive in the sentence, "She ran all the way home." It is transitive in the sentence, "He ran the business after his father died."
A transitive property is one where, if a is related to b, and b to c, a is therefore related to c in some way. An example of this would be height. If a is bigger than b, and b is bigger than c, a must be bigger than c. Thus, height is a transitive property.
The direct object normally follows the verb. The verb that precedes the direct object is not a specific type. A good way to see if the phrase following the verb is a direct object is to use the "passive test". Ex. Active voice: The pitcher threw the ball. Passive voice: The ball was thrown by the pitcher. Since we are able to make it passive we can see "the ball" is the direct object. One way I remember it is by asking "The pitcher threw what? The Ball"