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Frederic Xhonneux from belgium Track & Field
The dressing should be changed every day if possible. After the first few days, when the wound has stopped bleeding and begun healing over, a dressing is probably not necessary.
'Siutable' and 'neat' are the first two that come to my mind.
First learn to play on a smaller field.
FIRST: DON'T GO OVERBOARD. What are you putting the dressing on? Salad? :) Anyways, post what your putting the dressing on, then I will answer my best.
The wedding dress.
No. It does not designate any field you put in. That is something you have to do yourself. If you don't designate one, then it will ask you if you want to or if Access can put one in for you. If you allow Access to put one in, then it will insert a nwe field which will be an Autonumber field and this will be inserted at the top and so it will be the first field. It makes sense to have the first field as a key field, which is why it inserts it at the top, before the first field you put in. If you are setting your own, you should put that field in first, though you do not have to.
Hockeymariss: Field ops are new to clubpenguin. There are different field ops each week. At the beginning, it should tell you the instructions.
i believe if the field you are talking about is the one of dead flowers, you need to first unblock the water to the north-west so it forms a lagoon then drop villagers onto the field and they should bring the magical water to the field and after a while the field should bloom...
If you are a male, cross-dressing for the first time, then please don't go to a lesbian bar. You will not be welcome. If you are gay, then many gay bars will be most welcoming. If you are straight, I would recommend contacting your local cross-dressing group and going to one of their parties.
An occlusive dressing is a trauma dressing used in first-aid that can also keep out air and water. They are usually wax-coated to provide a better seal and to avoid absorption like gauze.
Stuffing and dressing are the same thing. It was called "stuffing" first, and was mentioned in print as far back as 1538. The Victorian upper crust began referring to this dish as "dressing" around 1880. The Pilgrims more than likely called it "stuffing", and it is more often called stuffing today than dressing.