If you have the same first and last name as someone else, you might be a "the first", "the second," "the third" or some other number, but only if the two of you are related and you are of different generations.
If your name is John Smith, you have the same first and last name as a lot of other people, most of whom your are not related to. You are John Smith the Second only if your father, grandfather, or other older relative is John Smith the first within your family and no one else (older than you) is already John Smith the second.
yes you are
The first and last, and the second and third.
kayak and level
They are basically the same, but last second is closer to the very end than last minute.
One example of a four-letter word where the second and last letters are the same is "ball." In this word, the second letter 'a' is the same as the last letter 'l.' Another example is "hall," where the second letter 'a' is also the same as the last letter 'l.' These are known as palindromic words, where the word reads the same forwards and backwards.
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With two pointers, the first simply goes through the list, the second does the same thing, but with half speed: List *first, *last, *mid; int cnt; for (last= mid= first, cnt= 0; last != NULL; last= last->next, ++cnt) { if (cnt%2==1) mid= mid->next; }
Lord Thunderin' ... Well the last one was Newfoundland and Labrador. I knows that much for sure. And the second last was Sasquatchewan, who came aboard on the same day as Alberta. So that's the last two.
None, because the first and last note have to be the same.
the first is a beginning,while the second is a continuation. they're both written to the same person.
Not according to AP style guides, no. You only hyphenate when the last of the first piece and the first letter of the second piece are the same vowel (such as "pre-election" or "re-enter").