Periods can go a lot of places, but mainly at the end of a statement. Ex: I went to the mall to shop for new clothes. (This is called a declarative sentence)
Question marks go at the end of sentences as well. Ex: Where did that paper go? (This is called an interrogatory sentence)
Another common type of punctuation is the exclamation point or mark, which always appear at the end of a sentence. Ex: That ice cream was splendid! (This is known as an exclamatory sentence)
Hope this helped!
Assuming the decimals go to inifinity.; it should be written as -0.3333.... ( Note the periods. This inidicates to mathemticians that it recurs to infinity). -0.333.... = -1/3 Method Let P = -0.3333.... 10P = -3.33333... Subtract 9P = -3 Note the recurring decimals subtract to zero. P = -3/9 P = -1/3
No, the verb is " to go", the word "in" describes were you go and is an adverb. Ask your self this, "to go where?" , "to go in". :] enjoy your new found knowledge
Go is not a noun at all: it is a form of the verb, to go. (The proper noun "Go" is a game native to Asia.)
In the context of the periodic table, a row is called a "period," which represents elements with the same number of electron shells. As you move across a period from left to right, the atomic number increases, and elements exhibit varying properties. In a broader context, a "row" generally refers to any horizontal line of items or data, while "period" can refer to a segment in time or a specific interval in various fields. Thus, while all periods are rows, not all rows are periods.
It does not go in evenly
The periods go outside the parenthesis. They wrap everything up.
Periods go across the periodic table. Groups go down.
there are many different periods of the world go on google and check it out
Periods on the periodic table are the horizontal rows that go from left to right.
Go see a doctor
Go and see your GP.
long periods
No
3 periods of 15 minutes each! If the score is equal for the 2 teams, there are supplementary periods.
No, periods are generally not used at the end of newspaper headlines. Headlines typically use sentence fragments or phrases, so they do not require complete sentences with periods.
I don't think these are periods and you should definitely go to your doctor.
go and see doctor