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No - the correct term is ageism.
The correct term is "honorous" refers to being filled with honor or deserving honor. It is less commonly used than "honorable" or "honourable."
The spelling "honers" could refer to those who hone (sharpen, such as knives).The more likely term is honors (praise or awards bestowed, or an advanced curriculum).
The correct spelling is second. (either the unit of time or 2nd in order)
The English transliteration of the Greek term for "honor" is "time" (as in tau + iota + mu + epsilon; note that this is the singular form). The phonetic pronunciation of this term is as follows: "tih-may", with the accent upon the second syllable.
ballsacks.
Committing an act of fraud against a bank the correct answer would be unable to pay debts and honor monetary commitments
The term 'no absences' is correct if used in the right context; for example: There are no absences in my class today. If you have no absences for the next week, you will be on the attendance honor roll. Our goal is no absences for on the job injuries.
The term that means death with honor is in honerem. It is a Latin phrase that is not often used in the US.
Arab is a politically correct term.
The correct term is padlock.
Cross multiplication IS the correct term!