The correct form is "a hindrance." The article "a" is used before words that begin with a consonant sound, and "hindrance" starts with the consonant sound /h/. Therefore, "a hindrance" is the appropriate choice.
Im assuming the "6x2" is supposed to be 6x squared. The factored form would be (2x+1) (3x-8)
The correct comparative form of the adjective "careful" is "more careful." The suffix "-er" is typically used to form comparative adjectives for one-syllable words, while longer adjectives use "more" before the base form. In this case, "careful" has two syllables, so "more careful" is the appropriate comparative form.
You had not taken that into account. Would be the grammatically correct version of that sentence.
The correct phrase is "What am I capable of?" In English, "capable of" is a common construction used to indicate the ability to do something. The phrase "Of what am I capable" is grammatically correct but sounds more formal and archaic. In everyday conversation, "What am I capable of?" is preferred.
need form
Answering questions on this website is becoming a hinderance to me getting a healthy amount of sleep.
hinderance
Plato
Something that hinders you is called a 'hindrance'.
black peopel
The correct comparative form of "simple" is "simpler" and the correct superlative form is "simplest."
NO. BUT IT WILL BE A HINDERANCE TO ONCOMING TRAFFIC
The opposite of hinder is to help, aid, or assist.
My correct form is an artificial intelligence assistant.
"You have begun" is correct.
The word "wolfs" is not correct. The correct spelling is wolves.
Yes, we are disturbing water cycle. Human activities are causing hinderance.