"+" to "+" and " - " to " - "
NEVER the other way around.
Note: It is much safer to connect the last "-" cable to somewhere on the car's bodywork away from the second battery. After the car has been started remove that same cable first. Doing it that way will help to avoid sparks causing explosions of the hydrogen gas which is given off from batteries when they are being charged.
Other answersVERY DANGEROUS!If connected improperly:
either from "+" of Battery A to "-" of Battery B
or
from "-" of Battery A to "+" of Battery B
then that would cause the jumper cables to short-out both batteries - boy would they spark, smoke and burn!
Because of the physical location of the starter in relation to the bell housing of the transmission, check for a short at the battery connect at the starter. Make sure that those connections are completely clear of any part of the bell housing and transmission. If that was the last place you worked, I would suspect that is the place to start looking.
Could be the cable is too light for the load i.e. excessive current draw for the wiring size.
Could be a dead short somewhere in the vehicle.
Check for a battery cable grounded out on the exhaust manifold.
no...it would have to say: It is because the frog was heavy yesterday morning. Is because does not make sense & if you put it is because then it does make sense.
No, the noun phrase 'yesterday morning' is a common noun, a general word for any yesterday morning at anytime.
"Yesterday" can be an adverb, a noun, or an adjective.ExamplesAdverb: We arrived yesterday.Noun: Yesterday started well. All our yesterdays.Adjective: Yesterday morning
Yesterday can be translated into Kikuyu language as ira.
The day that is today ended yesterday and started this morning.
yesterday morning at 7.00
Your sentence reads: Mom's angry yesterday morning. Mom's is a contraction for Mom is. So the sentence could read: Mom is angry yesterday morning. The verb is involves the present and only the present. Your mom might be mad right now. You might say: Mom is angry right now. That is the proper use of the word is. There is no way you can be mad yesterday morning right now. Pigs can not fly. Either Mom was angry yesterday morning or Mom is angry right now.
I think yesterday morning at 8 pm
Sun!
It opens at 1.30 in the morning and closes at 3.00 in the morning cause i reasearched it yesterday and their the correct times and it's that early because they're scared that vandalists might come and nick stuff
No, the correct form would be "I saw him twice yesterday." Using the past simple tense "saw" instead of "had seen" is more appropriate for describing completed actions in the past.
I had a conversation with your mother this morning.