Actually, there are many "palindromes".
was it a car or a cat i saw . .wasitacaroracatisaw. . ~ the only English sentence that has exactly the same words even if you read it reversely ! :)
well it means something that can be even and cant be even at the same time (cool he-he :) )
That's not a question -- not even a sentence.
"Even if their parents are sickly, that does not predispose the children to the same condition."
No, however, you should only use the word "homosexual" as an adjective, and even then, you should only use it for same-sex activity among animals. For Humans, you should use the word "gay" (also not capitalized).
A reversing entry is a journal entry to "undo" an adjusting entry. When you create a reversing journal entry it nullifies the accounting impact of the original entry. Reversing entries make it easier to record subsequent transactions by eliminating the need for certain compound entries. Reversing entry can be created in two ways. First method is to use the same set of accounts with contra debits and credits, meaning that the accounts and amounts that were debited in the original entry will be credited with the same amount in the reversing journal "nullifying" the accounting impact. The second method is to create a journal with same accounts but with negative amounts that will also nullify the accounting impact of the original transaction
A collision.
this is when there are the same digit numbers in the sentence
A sentence with two or more subjects joined by a conjunction and that share the same verb is called a compound subject sentence. In this type of sentence, the subjects are connected by a conjunction such as "and" or "or" and the verb is used only once to describe the action of both subjects.
No way, no chance, no how. Those two shouldn't even be mentioned in the same sentence.
no but if its a name u only capitalize the d wen its the other dj its the same
The sentence may or may not be redundant depending on context, but the use of both "just" and "only" is redundant. (You could say that the sentence contains a redundancy.) Both words mean the same thing in this context and just one of them would suffice.