appoligize and give correct amount
It's a physical change. Anytime you change the shape or appearance it is physical.
The grammer is wrong here...should be "what change is observed when a leaf was boiled in warm water in an experiment".
dalton was wrong about atoms being indivisible. atoms are divisible into several subatomic particles. dalton was wrong about all atoms of a given element having identical properties.
well m not all that sure myself, but i think their ionic substances. Very sorry if I'm wrong.
depending on the amount of iodine or carbon tetrachloride, it will be eaith pink(more CCl4) or violet (otherwise) please correct me if i'm wrong
Give her the correct change and apologize.
You spelled amount correctly. Example: The cashier gave me the wrong amount of change.
excuse me the spelling is wrong it is humidity it means the amount of water vapor in the air at the given time
Warranty.
The word is stipend corret my spelling if im wrong.
'had gave me' is incorrect grammar.'had given me' is correct. (given is the past participle of the verb 'to give')"After I had left the shop I realised that the shopkeeper had given me too much change!"The form 'had given' is known as the past perfect tense. The past perfect is used when there are two events which happened in the past and one happened after the other.For example, in the sample sentence above, several things happen, one after another...the shopkeeper gave me my changeI left the shopI realised my change was wrongIf we want to talk about any two of these past 'time separated' events we use the past perfect form.e.g.I left the shop after the man had given me my change.I realised he had given me the wrong change after I had left the shop.I realised the change was wrong a few seconds after he had given it to me.Compare:If I realised that the change was wrong at the same timeas it was being given to me, the past perfect is not used because the two events happened simultaneously, NOT one after the other.e.g. "When he gave me my change I saw that it was wrong."Similarly we could say "As I left the shop I realised my change was wrong."In this sentence two things are happening at the same time, i.e. leaving the shop + realising the change was wrong.But if I had realised the change was wrong AFTER I had left the shop, the sentence would be "After I had left the shop I realised my change was wrong."WHEN TO USE THE PAST PERFECT FORM ('had' + past participle):The form 'had + past participle' is used when there are two events in the past and one happened after the other.
the amount of insulin in her blood is wrong
Not as easy an answer as you would want. If you haven't closed the cash drawer, check quickly to see if any bills are in the wrong place. A $20 in the $5 drawer would indicate that the customer gave you a $20 and you gave her change for a $5. If you've closed the drawer, though, your company's policy probably says that you can't do that until they've reconciled the books. Sure to make your customer angry, but it's probably a policy based on the many times retail outlets have been scammed by dishonest customers claiming wrong change. It's an easy mistake to make and a difficult one to reconcile.
=NO=
There is a change in rate of energy transfer as time passes because of the amount of energy in both objects. -probably wrong
You will be disqualified for handing in a card with the wrong handicap. That is what the rules dictate should happen, if you are given a card with the wrong handicap on it, you should change it.
wrong is wrong. report it