Here are the circumstances: I am a German sending a code to another German in WWII, an English officer has intercepted this broadcast. The code is as follows:
"Hi how are you doing? I hope you are fine, what is for dinner?"
The fact is the easiest code to break is one in the language you are most familiar with.
I hope this answers your question...
a straight line
deep throat
Japan was notoriously negligent in this kind of work. They hardly put in the effort and did not break any important codes. Germany did a much better job in breaking Allied codes, but there were quite a number of them amongst the Allies and they never broke anything as important as their own Ultra code. But they did for instance for a time break the British naval code and the US code for diplomatic messages.
They invented the first log to break and plow through the big doors that kingdoms used to keep people out.This eventually lead to the new idea of the worlds largest Dildo!
The War of the Worlds has 303 pages.
Ballet
drug lord
Either of the tibia and fibula are the easiest to break in the leg.
a straight line
Pink
101 Dalmatians
The worlds safest & easiest to use face paint.
a code is
Covalent bonds are the easiest to break, since they are the easiest to make. But no substance is made when bonds break.
Because it is the easiest and least expensive to break down and remold.
OICU812
haahha