deep sht
people would be in slavery with britan...probably, we might not exist or would have died at a young age.
George Shiels has written: 'Bedmates' 'The rugged path & The summit' 'Moodie in Manitoba' 'Macook's Corner' 'The Rugged Path' 'Selected plays of George Shiels' -- subject(s): Drama 'Mountain Post'
Myrna Oakley has written: 'Oregon' -- subject(s): Guidebooks 'Oregon Off the Beaten Path, 9th' 'Washington Off the Beaten Path, 6th' 'Bed & breakfast, Northwest' -- subject(s): Bed and breakfast accommodations, Directories 'Washington Off the Beaten Path' 'Washington Off the Beaten Path, 5th' 'Oregon' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Guidebooks
Union General George B. McClellan, along with many other Union generals, believed the best way to defend Washington DC, would be to assault Richmond, the Confederate capital. Their thinking was that if Confederate General Robert E. Lee had been compelled to fight for the safety of Richmond, he would have been forced to concentrate the main part of his army around that city. Now Lee would still have the ability to launch a raid down the Shenandoah Valley, if the valley was improperly protected by Union forces, this would only require a small segment of his army. It would not constitute a decisive threat to Washington DC. With the Union attacking, rather then withdrawing, this would have forced Lee to fight which to many was the best path to a Union end to the rebellion.
It means to do something different. Think out of the box would be the modern version.
A photon is a particle of light, so they would travel the same path. As a photon travels through the different layers of the Sun, it may experience absorption, scattering, and re-emission by the particles in those layers. The process of absorption and re-emission can cause the photon's path to become randomized.
The same way you would date anyone else. We are human after-all, we just walk a different spiritual path.
Diverge.
Vivian George Simmons has written: 'The path of life' -- subject(s): Reform Judaism, Judaism
Booker T. Washington
Yes, the path of an object's projectile motion can depend on the angle of a catapult. Changing the angle at which the object is launched from the catapult would alter the initial velocity and direction of the projectile, affecting its trajectory and resulting in a different path.
Most flights from London to Washington DC will fly over south Wales, the Irish sea, the middle of Ireland and the Atlantic Ocean before reaching Washington.