it you that 's spinning
Dracula had no age. He looks around 1220000 years old, though!
A wheel that looks similar to the London eye, you find them at fairs.It is a giant metal wheel with seats around it for entertainment at fairgrounds
NO It is not true.- - - - - I'm also trying to figure out where this "38mph was the cruising speed of a German staff car in World War II" thing came from. (38mph is 60 km/hr, btw.) Germans can't drive that slowly.
1,190 pounds
well you need to have modeling clay and lots and lots of newspaper you look how it really looks and you model it and put newspaper all around the inside
Looks like a helicopter without the spinning thing on the tail and have big compound eyes and they have wings that don't spin around.
One day. You can imagine the Sun as staying roughly in the same place compared to the Earth (we can ignore the Earth moving around the sun for now) - what we see as the sun moving around the sky is actually the Earth turning on its axis. This is like being on a roundabout - as we rotate on the roundabout, a person standing on the ground looks like they rotate around us.
A spiral galaxy.
No, but it looks like its moving 'cause the earth is spinning.
Sounds like a roundabout, where some roads meet and you have to drive round the middle... Do you know what a Polo Mint looks like?
Sonic can spin because he runs so fast it looks like he is spinning.
Six legs, head 1/3 the size of the body, very long tail, two longish wings on each side.
Bicycles designed for spinning have large flywheels with mulitple levels of resistance. The flywheel spins the pedals at 85-95 revolutions per minute as opposed to a rideable bike pedal's 40-60 revolutions per minute. The spinning bike makes less of an impact on your knee joints, too.
Because we experience day and night. Everything in our Solar System revolves around the Sun, so since it still looks like the Sun is rising and setting we know we are the ones who are moving, not the Sun. We rotate on our axis, which makes the day/night cycle, as we revolve around the Sun.
Aside from spinning the dreidel upside down (which looks hard, but is actually very easy), there are no tricks. Just the Dreidel game.
In the first part of the poem, the spinner looks for a quiet and lonely place where she can find solitude and peace. She seeks a place away from the hustle and bustle of the world, where she can focus on her task of spinning and escape from the chaos around her.
Well, spinning the bottle in a circular motion creates a water vortex that looks like a mini tornado. The water is rapidly spinning around the center of the vortex due to centripetal force (an inward force directing an object or fluid such as water towards the center of its circular path). Vortexes found in nature include tornadoes, hurricanes and waterspouts (a tornado that forms over water).