A seismograph records large P waves that are the fastest waves then it will recorded S waves which are bigger than the P Waves. Followed by surface waves.
The lines on the map signify the height of a hill. The closer together they are the steeper the hill. At various points on these lines there may be numbers, these show the gradient of the hill... hope that helps!
its when nrubish comes ona park like that
It would mean that the point where they crossed had 2 different elevation, which is impossible.
Contour Plowing is when you plow, like, a garden for example, but instead of plowing in straight lines, you go in curvy lines (you know what I mean, right?) Conservation Plowing, however, is like the normal plowing way. Straight lines, blablabla.
If I understand your question you mean geology.
It means congruent. It is NOT 'approximately equal', which would be an equal sigh where BOTH lines are squiggly.
The phone is on vibrate
You mean pi? That would be the two vertical lines with the squiggly on top. I think.
The 2 squiggly lines (~) is called a tilde. It can mean "approximately" or "similar to" in text, as well as indicate a range of values. It is also used in some languages as a diacritic mark to change the pronunciation of a letter.
this is and ampersand......&
If that light is staying on, the engine computer has detected a malfunction in the electronic throttle control system.
Assuming you mean 'seismogram' - it's a printout from a seismometer... which is an instrument that measures earthquakes.
these lines represent that the drawing is too large for he required space so the lines help the spectator to understand that the drawing is too big.
If you mean the n with a squiggly line on top, it's pronounced en-yay.
If you mean as in a quantity as in" too little knowledge", then it's "poco." If you mean as in size, like small, then it's " pequeno." with the squiggly on the n.
A number of computer programs and phone apps have built in spell-checkers. If the word you have used is not one which the computer/phone recognizes, it marks it with a squiggly red line. This does not necessarily mean that you have spelled the word wrong: it could be a proper noun, or a slang word, or a spelling which is not used by the geek who created the program. The squiggly line is only an alert; you must decide if the word actually needs changing.
The word is mispelledA RED squiggly line means the word is misspelled. A GREEN squiggly line means that there is one or more extra space or tab characters that aren't grammatically needed.