1. path
2. toilet
4 feet
The unit of 1.96 is missing
she was wearing red velvet slippers with silver bows and 5 millimetre high heels
farm,coffee shoptrain stationbearywood malland the lighthouse, there tiny so look really hard.
Density value is missing.
4' by 7' is an area of 28 square feet. There is missing the height to calculate the volume in cubic feet.
The unit of the these dimensions is missing.
We're missing a dimension here. 233 feet is a distance. It would need to be multiplied by another distance to get square footage.
Bows (as in Bows and Arrows) come in many different kinds. Bows are one of the earliest projectile weapon systems. Seen in many cultures around the world. The English, or Welsh, Long Bow as as tall as the man who shot it and whose arrows could pierce oak doors. They were deadly 300 meters away. (Some records indicate an arrow flight up to 838 Yards)* Other kinds: The Cross Bow (using a draw-back and a lock, that held a high-tension string.) Advantage - high powered and it could be cocked and held without tiring the arm and released at a moment's notice. Deadly, but inaccurate at any long distance. Bows (Chinese Bows, Japanese, African, Eskimo, Native American, etc.) are sometimes made of one piece of wood, or composited from many different materials, but all create tension on the string then release it hurling the arrow (or bolt) away from the shooter. Some would add in various catapulting devices that hurl huge bolts with a mechanical device, a winch, to draw back the cord into this category. In service, G.Robin Smith *P 130-135, A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor in All Countries and in All Times, by George Cameron Stone.
Your missing the angle of elevation or depression.
Yes hermit crabs do have feet, it is the little segment at the bottom of their leg. But if it is missing don't worry it will grow back the next time it molts.
The simple answer is yes. There are, however, dogs born with congenital defects that result in missing limbs, and many other dogs with missing limps as the result of illness or injury. Most dogs can very easily adapt to one--or even in some cases two--missing feet without a great deal of difficulty. Hind limbs are generally easier for a dog to cope with the loss of than forelimbs, but they can adapt to either.