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Nylon can make the raincoat because it has elastic, have a low moisture regain, exceptionally strong and soft.
Children might need to wear a raincoat if it is raining outside. This helps protect the child from getting wet and getting sick. You can purchase a child's raincoat online from stores such as Target.
A raincoat and umbrella.
A Raincoat? Like a literal raincoat? This question makes almost no sense but ok. The melting point is the temperature at which a substance transitions from solid to liquid. You, as a raincoat user, presumably prefer your raincoat in the solid phase. Therefore you would want this transition point to occur as far away from the normal range of temperatures in your area. The higher the melting point of the raincoat, the hotter it can get without getting ruined. But again, this makes 0 sense.
You can't use a property, as it's a description of something a substance does. A better question would be to ask 'What are the properties you would look for in a material to be used for a raincoat?' You'd want it to be waterproof, flexible, hard wearing and comfortable.
you would go west
well it takes about 5 hours for a plane to fly from cairo to London, if the plane takes off from cairo at 10pm it would reach London at 3 am (cairo time) but London time is 2 hours before cairo time so therefore you would reach London at 1 am GMT
A 1-way from Cairo to Berlin would take about 4 hours.
Jakarta would be hotter than Dublin. This is because Indonesia is closer to the equator than Ireland and it is in a tropical region.
There's no direct flight between any NZ airport and Jakarta. However, AirNZ just started AKL to Bali flight this June. From there, there are plenty of domestic flights that can connect you to Jakarta, almost every hour. Lion Air, Garuda, Batavia, CityLink, Merpati, Sriwijaya all provide flights to Jakarta. Your other options would be from OZ (Sydney or Melbourne) direct into Jakarta.
dunno!but it cant because it turns to rain, if it didnt it would be fog.