There are 42 gallons in a barrel of crude. The price today is around $100 per barrel. That equates to $2.38 per gallon of crude. The percents depends on the state in which you live. The Federal gas tax is 18.4 cents per gallon. State tax ranges from a low of 8 cents in Alaska to a high of 51.2 in New York. The operator of the gas station and the refinery will make about 50 cents per gallon profit. The selling gas station owner makes around 3 to 5 cents net profit on each gallon sold. In some cases where there is stiff competition they will make nothing. But they want you to come to their store as you may buy other things. Lots of the cost of a gallon is related to refinery costs and transportation costs.
Yes, so long as you have the nescessary entites installed.
State licensing as such in most cases.
entites are problems, procedures, data spaces, programs representing procedures in particular programming languages, and computers it does depend on what type of entities your talking about for example entities involved in a buisness getting paid are the people of companies being affected... e.g banks tax department and even the boss so be careful when you are talking about entiteis it means more than on thing!
Walmart is the largest private employer at 2.1 million employees, but if you include non-corporate entites, it is the U.S. Department of Defense at 3.2 million employees. These figures are from 2012.
Wrap insurance, or Owner Controlled Insurance Programs, are insurance policies that cover a construction project for all entites who are enrolled in that project. Coverage may include general liability or work comp insurance.
A judgment lien that is recorded becomes an encumbrance on the real estate. It means someone else has a security interest in the property until the lien is paid off. Once a lien is recorded it constitutes a cloud on the title. Title insurance companies want to know exactly what they are insuring so they want the title examined to disclose any other entites that may have any interest in the property.
AnswerAt the time Shakespeare was writing, ghosts were generally dismissed by the aristocracy, and used by writers as a literary tool, like the father in Hamlet. There were no consistent beliefs running throughout England about the supernatural. They did not, generally speaking, practice exorcism or any form of spirit-communication. These would not appear for a couple hundred years.Madness was frequently attributed to either toxins in the blood or malevolent entites (ie demons), but was not really addressed. The insane were usually just rounded up and isolated into prisons and often (all the way up to the Victorian ages) served as entertainment for the rich who would tour the facilities, sort of like more modern freak shows.Sanitariums and asylums would not appear until the 1700-1800's, and even then, were most frequently just sections of established prisons.
The maple that it produces. The three golden maple leaves on the Shield of Armorial Bearings of the Province of Ontario depicted on the Flag of Ontario represent Canada, although the flag itself is that of the Province of Ontario. The maple leaf is also very well known in Canada as the symbol of the Toronto Maple Leafs, one of Canada's National Hockey League teams, in that case, blue in colour. The sprig of maple leaves on the Queen's Canadian Royal Standard is part of a flag that symbolizes the Queen of Canada herself. Many commercial entites operating in Canada, often subsidiaries of American corporations such as General Motors and McDonalds, include a red maple leaf prominently in their corporate logos, which are otherwise stylistically identical to their American counterparts. Air Canada, Canada's flag air carrier, has as a primary element of its logo a maple leaf. The wordmark of the Government of Canada (Canada's federal government) depicts the stylized maple leaf of the Canadian flag. The maple leaf is the mascot and team nickname of the sports teams of Goshen College, in Goshen, Indiana. A maple leaf is depicted on the coat of arms of Sammatti, Finland. Carthage, Missouri is "America's Maple Leaf City".
An object is an instance of a class. A class is the broad definition of something, and an object is one particular one of those. In the real world Dog is a class. A particular individual dog is an object. The class defines what a dog is, what characteristics it has, what it can do etc. In computing you could have a bank account class, defining characteristics and things that you can do with it. It could define that a bank account has an account number, the owner of the account, a balance, a facility to lodge money, a facility to with draw money etc. That is the case for any bank account. Your bank account is an object, an instance of that class. Your account isn't my account, but both of our accounts are objects and have the characteristics as defined by the bank account class.
The question may variously be about the United Monarchy of Israel, the existence of which many modern historians doubt, the (northern) kingdom of Israel, or the (southern) kingdom of Judah, which was often also known as Israel in later centuries.If I provide answers for the northern and southern kingdoms, this will also be the answer for the United Monarchy that the Bible says existed under Kings Saul, David and Solomon. Bear in mind that in ancient times, borders were fluid and ill-defined, so no one answer would be correct across the centuries. Also, the idea of 'countries' is substantially anachronistic, as most political entites consisted of a city and the land surrounding it and under its control.IsraelThe northern kingdom (Israel) was relatively short-lived, being conquered by the Assyrian Empire in 722 BCE. It was bounded on the north by Megiddo, on the east by the Jordan River, on the west by Dor, the south-west by Philistia and on the south by Judah.The kindom was greatly expanded under King Ahab, whose conquests included Megiddo and Dor, in the latter case in order to gain access to a Mediterranean port. Although the Israelites conquered Dor, the Israelites never settled the territory, and so Dor, Megiddo and Samaria (former Israel) were maintained by the Assyrians as separate provinces after their conquests.JudahJudah was bounded on the north by Israel (which became the Assyrian and then Babylonian province of Samaria), on the east by the Dead Sea and on the west by Philistia (actually a loose confederation of independent city-states).The situation on the south and south-east was particularly fluid. The area south of Judah was quite arid and largely inhabited until the Edomites, who had occupied the area to the south-east of Judah, migrated there and into the region of southern Judah, during the period of the Babylonian Exile. The Edomites became known to the Greeks as Idumeans. Later, the Nabateans occupied the southern area and, by the construction of cisterns, were able to create a thriving agriculture.