yerr boats name is sunday x}}
Start from your home, just to the east of the International Date Line, on a Monday. Cross the IDL into Sunday and sail for an hour and then return home. Do all of this before midnight.
Your boat's name is Sunday ^ Know, The Correct Answer Is... If You Cross The International Date Line You Would Advance Your Calender One Day. Thank You Ever So Much
Tuesday because Fall is right after Summer as is Tuesday and Monday. (: Your welcome. Tuesday (Original Answer by Other) Fall is to Summer as Monday is to ______? (Question) The correct answer would be Sunday. Tuesday is after Monday but isn't correct because it says Monday first not Tuesday, therefore the answer is Sunday. Fall follows Summer and Monday follows Sunday. I hope I explained it so everybody could understand why Sunday is correct rather than Tuesday. It is much harder to explain to others in a text than it is to answer the question in my head. =)p
so we could have rainfall on the earth
Because he had no physical mechanism to explain how his "islands" of rock could go freely sailing about where they wanted to through the solid rock of the ocean floor. That was how his theory was seen at the time.
Start from your home, just to the east of the International Date Line, on a Monday. Cross the IDL into Sunday and sail for an hour and then return home. Do all of this before midnight.
Your boat's name is Sunday ^ Know, The Correct Answer Is... If You Cross The International Date Line You Would Advance Your Calender One Day. Thank You Ever So Much
Every Monday is before the next Sunday. So in one way you could say always. In a more practical situation, on a calendar that has been printed incorrectly, it will show a Monday before a Sunday. See the related question below.
False, Fall is to Winter or the answer could be Fall is to Summer as Monday is to Sunday.
Tuesday because Fall is right after Summer as is Tuesday and Monday. (: Your welcome. Tuesday (Original Answer by Other) Fall is to Summer as Monday is to ______? (Question) The correct answer would be Sunday. Tuesday is after Monday but isn't correct because it says Monday first not Tuesday, therefore the answer is Sunday. Fall follows Summer and Monday follows Sunday. I hope I explained it so everybody could understand why Sunday is correct rather than Tuesday. It is much harder to explain to others in a text than it is to answer the question in my head. =)p
If a teacher walked into the classroom and said "If only yesterday was tomorrow, today would have been Saturday" then the day would have to be Monday. The day before Monday is Sunday, and if Sunday were the next day, the current day would be Saturday.
Christopher Columbus was convinced that he could reach Asia by sailing west.
Monday next sounds funny. This statement can be confusing. If in doubt, use the date or clarify with the person you are talking with. If it is Tuesday, I might assume next Monday is this coming Monday. The word Next typically means the one that is coming. It might be better to just say, "This coming Monday". I would never say next Monday to refer to this coming Monday. It can sounds funny and could be confusing. If it were Saturday or Sunday and you said next Monday, it is probably implied that you are talking about the Monday following this Monday. Since it is the Monday after this Monday, it is the next Monday. You wouldn't say next Monday if you are talking about tomorrow or the day after tomorrow.
You log in for 5 days. It does not have to be in a row. So say I logged on Monday then I could log on wednusday and then next monday and then sunday. The only way to get credit for logging in is to take care of one of your horses.
Sunday has nothing to do with it and notice depends on your state laws. I found a law stating that a repo could not be done on Sunday unless the debtor had given written consent to do it on Sunday. The kicker of the article was that it was in New Zealand, not the USA.
Monday through Friday are considered business days. When you are counting out the business days ignore Saturday and Sunday. As an example, if today is Thursday and you have a package that should arrive 2-5 business days from today, You could get it any time between Monday and Thursday. 2 business days from today, would be Friday, skip Saturday and Sunday, and Monday. 5 business days is 3 days past that or Thursday.
Yes, If you were driving uninsured then you were uninsured, it doesn't matter what day of the week it is.