The "Find Command"
"Computer skills" is an English equivalent of the French phrase compétences informatiques. The feminine plural noun and feminine/masculine plural adjective also may be rendered into English as "computer proficiencies." The pronunciation will be "ko-peytaw-sseh-for-ma-teek" in French.
this question is obscure. you may want to re-phrase it. If you are talking of input devices, then:keyboardmousemicrophonewebcamgraphics tabletIf you are talking about what goes between the input devices and the computer's processor, it is a type of software called a driver. This decodes binary data into data processable by the CPU
Question is not valid. That's like saying how much deer meat is in potato soup. The correct way to phrase the question is" "How much memory does a computer have?" Which the answer to the revised question would be: "Depends on the type of computer you have. There is no set maximum amount, except for the set amount that the computer itself can handle. You can have anywhere between 128 (or less) megabytes of RAM or disk space to 4 GB of RAM and 999,999,999,999,999,999,999,...etc. terabytes of disk space (namely an infinite amount of diskspace).
Macros can be used for a number of things. They can be used to create documents and other essential functions in a document easily. Macros are used for management and evaluation of spreadsheets.
Stoned is the name of a boot sector computer virus created in 1987.Notable for being an early boot sector virus, it was thought to have been written by a university student in Wellington, New Zealand[1][2] - and by 1989 it had spread widely in New Zealand and Australia.[3] It was one of the very first viruses, and was, along with its many variants, very common and widespread in the early 1990s.[4]When an infected computer started, there was a one in eight probability[5][6] that the screen would declare:Your PC is now Stoned!The phrase is found in infected boot sectors of infected floppy disks and master boot records of infected hard disks along with the phrase "Legalise Marijuana".
It appears to refer to a document which contains a listing of medical procedures which, although they might be tax deductible, you will not be directly reimbursed for. Without the document containing this phrase there is no way of telling what they might be.
I don't know. But, in the King James version the phrase - the sons of - appears 560 times the phrase - it came to pass - appears 453 times the phrase - and thou shalt - appears 423 times the phrase - the lord thy God - appears 304 times
In the King James version the phrase - he gave - appears 79 times the phrase - she gave - appears 6 times
The phrase 'command decision' means that something has been decided by the head of the organization. It came from military lingo.
Its a command.
According to my concordance of the Authorised Version of the Bible, it appears 538 times, and the parallel phrase, 'thou shalt', appears 1212 times. But the phrase, 'I will', which mosly refers to God, appears 2620 times
themes
If you are writing a REALLY LONG document, and you need to find a word or phrase, you type it up in the find section. To find something, just press CTRL + F. Hope this satisfies your question!
word prossesor
filled with terror now use a word or phrase for this
No -- not when it is being used as a noun phrase by itself. ("She was at the bottom of the chain of command.") However, you would hyphenated it if this noun phrase was being used to modify a noun that came after it: "The ship was plagued by chain-of-command issues." "The comapny had to clarify its chain-of-command policy."
Yes, it can be said is a command sentence. Tell me is the phrase that is making it a command one.