In Irish it's "an rud a bhíonn, bíonn"
In Scottish Gaelic:
Irish (Gaelic): cosa (feet, legs) (Scottish) Gaelic: casan (feet, legs)
In Scottish Gaelic it is casan; in Irish (Gaelic) it is cosa.
When they are crow's feet.
Rub dirty socks on your face, or rub somebody elses smelly feet on your face.
You need to know the area of the pipe or duct. If you have that area, in square feet, V = Q/A where V = velocity (ft/minute in this case), Q = flowrate (cubic feet/minute in ths case), and A = area (square feet in this case). Then, you just have to apply conversions to get whatever units you want to present or use the answer in.
Whatever you want to.
You don't have to do that when you enter a mosque only when your about to pray or do something like that. Also, its not just your feet you have to perform a washing ritual in which you rinse your hands, arms, mouth, nose, face, ears, neck, and feet, I think. And it's so that your clean when you pray, read Koran, fast, whatever
'Feet first' is the answer
feet first
A
They use their feet to grip branches or whatever else they need to.
5,280 feet, same as a Gaelic, Creole, or Mandarin mile. That's 1,609.344 meters.