Is it "cooking the books?"
Padding the budget means making the budget proposal larger than the actual estimates for the project. This is done either by increasing a project's expenses or decreasing its expected revenue. The goal of budget padding is to get an approval committee to grant an artificially high level of funding to the budget maker's proposed project. There is some contention over the exact definition of padding: some contend that inflating expenses to take expected inflation into account is responsible foresight rather than padding, while others see any increase beyond current estimates as padding.
another name for a file allocation unit is a cluster.
Another name of cash flow statement is fund flow statement.
Owner
Bonds.
Legislation.
The Books of Law
The five books of Moses.
Menn Padding or as it is more commonly known 'Gay Sex' Is when a man has sex with another man.
Padding
The Torah or the five books which is the pentatauch
in the Percy Jackson books another name for the half-bloods is demigods. hope this helps. if not.... sorry
what is the another name for computer network
{| ! style="PADDING-RIGHT: 1px; PADDING-: 1px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 1px; PADDING-TOP: 1px" | 1950 | 7,891,957 ! style="PADDING-RIGHT: 1px; PADDING-: 1px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 1px; PADDING-TOP: 1px; BORDER-BOTTOM: #bbbbbb 1px solid" | 1960 | 7,781,984 ! style="PADDING-RIGHT: 1px; PADDING-: 1px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 1px; PADDING-TOP: 1px" | 1970 | 7,894,862 ! style="PADDING-RIGHT: 1px; PADDING-: 1px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 1px; PADDING-TOP: 1px" | 1980 | 7,071,639 ! style="PADDING-RIGHT: 1px; PADDING-: 1px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 1px; PADDING-TOP: 1px" | 1990 | 7,322,564 ! style="PADDING-RIGHT: 1px; PADDING-: 1px; PADDING-BOTTOM: 1px; PADDING-TOP: 1px" | 2000 | 8,008,288 |}
pop out books
It is a miss spelling of the word Pentateuch.Which is another name for the 5 Books of Moses, the first 5 books of the Old Testament.
Another name for the apocrypha books is the "deuterocanonical" books. This term is often used in the context of the Catholic and Orthodox Christian traditions, which include these texts in their canon. In contrast, Protestant traditions typically refer to these writings as apocryphal, indicating that they are not considered part of the authoritative scripture.