Her real identity is... http://media.Photobucket.com/image/ugly/deyonte19/ugly-girl.jpg
* ---- how does Globalization influence your identity
pop culture and identity are alike because they both like cake.. this is fact
I don't think it has promoted an American identity. The story we think we know is not the real story so what we know is myth. The British didn't raise the tea tax but LOWERED the tax. Smugglers were upset over the reduced tax because it meant that the cost of the tea they smuggled into the colonies was higher priced than British tea. It was smugglers that threw the tea into the harbor and it wasn't the Sons of Liberty dressed as indians. This gives the story a different light, but if you think about it the story becomes more real.
There is none.
Bruce banner
Peter Pan is a fictional character in a story. He doesn’t have a real identity.
Zero is the additive identity in the set of real numbers; when you add zero to any number, the number does not change its identity.
-3 does not have a multiplicative identity in the set of real numbers.
Shiek
It's Harkness, although that is not his real name, he stole the identity of the real Captain Jack during WW1. His real identity is unknown.
Bruce Wayne
Debbie Clausing
There are no defined benchmark of authenticity on Facebook account, so its near to impossible to identify the real identity of anyone on Facebook. On the other side, you can identify the real identity of the brand page.
His real name is Michael Joseph Jackson. That is really him.
They both considered "identity elements". 0 is actually the identity element under addition for the real numbers, since if a is any real number, a + 0 = 0 + a = a. Mathematicians refers to 0 as the additive identity (or better said, the reflexive identity of addition). 1 is a separate and special entity called 'Unity' or 'Identity element'. 1 is actually the identity element under multiplication for the real numbers, since a x 1 = 1 x a = a. Mathematicians refers to 1 as the multiplicative identity (or better said, the reflex identity of multiplication).
It is the additive identity.
no