Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.Then we would be living in a different, and to us very strange, universe. To allow such a drastic change in the laws of nature would probably require changing many other things, too. Basically, you would have to invent a different universe.
It would only change two things: no deserts on earth, and no animals that live in the desert terrain.
I would stay exactly the same...............well, I might change a few things.............well, total make over.
what are three things you will change in the preamble
I would not change the ending.
change many things
There are so many things that would be different. In fact, life may cease to exist. The biggest change would be smaller tides and the earth's ocean volume would be smaller. There would be less ocean and more land.
Things can not be a chemical change. This question needs rephrasing. "What things undergo chemical change" maybe a better question but even then the question would be too broad.
If you would change the language of Haiti, then Haitians would speak a different language.
People would say different things, of course, but you can have your own opinion and other people would disagree and say different things, some would agree.
maybe peace but it would mean different things to different people
Depending on the context, the rate of change may be called different things. In algebra, we recognize rate of change as slope. Or, more simply, change in y over change in x. In calculus, the rate of change is the slope of the line tangent to the curve. In terms of chemistry, the rate of change would refer to the reaction rate.