The most likely reason is static electricity.
no. "s" is a consonant so "clothes" starts with a consonant and ends with a consonant
you can tie a knot at the end and if it's nylon you can melt the ends.
The "on" at the end is to allude to the ends of the names of such fibers as Cotton and Rayon, and they just picked the "nyl" because they liked the way it sounded. The story about nylon being short for New York and London is...just a story. The full form of nylon is either Nylon-6 or Nylon-6.6, depending on manufacturer. DuPont invented Nylon-6.6 and holds a patent on its manufacture. BASF wanted also to make nylon because it sells very well so they invented Nylon-6.
The people who created the clothes were the _______ of life. You can fill that in and it starts with FU and ends with ERS
· napkin · nation · neon · nightgown · nitrogen · noon · notation · noun · nun · nylon
You can keep them, but not wear them after it ends.
nooo!
Yes, only your puffles. The clothes will be there, but shaded and not for use.
Nylons are condensation copolymers formed by reacting equal parts of a diamine and dicarboxylic acid, so that peptide bonds form at both ends of each monomer in a process analogous to polypeptide bipolymers. Chemical elements included are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen.
(CARS) stands for Compensatory Anti-Inflammatory Response Syndrome. It is a complex set of inflammatory reactions following a severe injury or infection. The body tries to protect the body against the infection and ends up completely shutting down.
Eurathemphematorial fatThroat
The <body> tag starts it and </body> ends it.