Section 9, i believe.
Article I of the Constitution refers to the legislative branch otherwise known as Congress, of the federal government.
Assuming this refers to the US Constitution, there are no such sections.
"Off lead" in a newspaper typically refers to an article or story that is not assigned as the main or front-page story. It may appear on inside pages or sections of the newspaper.
Article 3.
An article refers to three words; a, an, the.
The Constitution breaks the government into three sections. They are the Executive Branch, the Judicial Branch and the Legislative Branch. The legislature is authorized to create and pass laws.
The US Constitution consists of larger sections which are the Articles, which are divided further into sections. Some laws use the further subdivision into clauses and subclauses, but in the Constitution itself, these take are not labeled as such. The term "clause" refers to any individual sentence or sentences with a section.
This question refers to relationships and coordination between American State and Federal governance. Links are critical to ensure cooperation of law enforcement and the redistribution of Congressional budget appropriations.
Federal
Article 2818---refers to bulk rate mail---means an article is discardable if not deliverable---the sender does not want it back.
A surplus budget is a year in which more money is taken in than is spent. This situation is very unusual in recent years, but did occur a couple of times in the 1990s.
No. The word "a" is an article. It is an indefinite article, along with "an," that refers to any of the examples of a group, set, or range of concepts.