A driveway is equivalent to a sidewalk as both are pathways for pedestrians and vehicles to travel on.
Yes. the word "along" is a preposition and sidewalk is its object noun. The prepositional phrase is "along the crowded sidewalk" and it modifies the verb "is hurrying" saying where the hurrying is taking place.
[object Object]
[object Object]
[object Object]
equivalent fractions of 12 = 12/1, 24/2,36/3,48/4
sidewalk is abiotic
yes sidewalk is an American word.mean to say pavement. sidewalk:-pavement,root
The purpose of a sentence is to convey information or an idea. It is a group of words that tells that information or idea. In order to be a sentence, the group of words must contain a subject and a verb. A sentence can also have an object or objects and phrases, conjunctions, etc. Examples: Rain falls. (rain is the subject and falls is the verb) Rain falls on the sidewalk. (sidewalk is the object) Rain falls on the sidewalk and the lawn. (sidewalk and lawn are both objects) Rain falls on the sidewalk and the lawn in the summer. Rain falls on the sidewalk and the lawn in the summer but in the winter it snows. You can make a simple sentence like the first or a complex sentence, but a sentence must have a subject and a verb to be a sentence. It is alleged that the native Americans adopted the word "How" as their greeting because all the Europeans that were crossing their land wanted to know, "How's the hunting here, how's the fishing there, how's the weather year-round?".
That's equivalent to asking "Can an object move?" - Yes, it can.
The declination of a celestial object is the exact equivalent of latitude.
Both, you exert a force onto the sidewalk, and the sidewalk "pushes back" with an equal, but opposite force.
That is equivalent to saying that:* The object moves, or * The object's position changes over time