What the words have in common, except one, is that when the first letter and last letter are removed, they still remain actual words. ex: swing - win brawl - raw odd one out: carrot
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NO
"Three-hundred seventy-five degrees" Improperly: "Three-hundred and seventy-five degrees"
Yes, planting a clover lawn can attract clover mites. The arachnids in question (Bryobia praetiosa Koch) feed upon clovers and grasses. The unwelcome predation will be less devastating or likely when proper light, moisture, nutrient and temperature requirements are observed for clover lawns since clover mites prioritize over-fertilized, over-watered yards.
They don't eat clover as such, but they do like the nectar from clover and readily collect it and take it back to their nest.
78/100 is a proper fraction. Proper fractions can't become mixed numbers.
.372
1,070,000 pounds. Actually, the proper way to say it is: one million seventy thousand pounds (without the use of 'and')
No, carrot is a common noun. Any common noun can become a proper noun when it is used for the name or title of someone or something, such as the comedian Carrot Top or Carrot River, Saskatchewan, Canada.
$3.77 $10 + $5 = $15 = $11.23 + $3.77 three dollars seventy-seven cents
Norway is a proper noun, not an adjective. It is the name of a country. It does not change.
The noun clause is "Superhero Flaming Carrot wears flippers".The complete clause is "why Superhero Flaming Carrot wears flippers", and adverbial clause modifying the verb wonder.Note: The name of the character must be capitalized as a proper noun.
Expressed as a proper fraction in its simplest form, 0.071 is equal to 71/1000 or seventy-one thousandths.