his promblem is that he is on the boat and he isw sick so he cant find th way to get home
To find information for which you want to know of. A person can research to proof (or disprove) theory, to build a hypothesis (or hypotheses), to determine statistical data results (facts), or to seek knowledge on specific event(s), person(s), place(s), or thing(s)
There are three possible options for your question. If you are referring to more than one teacher, there is no apostrophe (teachers). If you are referring to an object that belongs to one teacher, the apostrophe is between the r and s (teacher's desk). If you are referring to an object that belongs to more than one teacher, the apostrophe is after the s (teachers' break room).
S stnds for Subject,TV Stnds for Transitive verb,O Stnds for Object.The Object of a verb recieves the action indicated by the verb. Example: S TV O Our ancestors Possessed Skills
In academics, the "S" in academics usually stands for "studies" or "scholarship." It refers to the pursuit of knowledge and learning in a specific subject area.
I've been trying to figure this out myself for a discrete structure class.From the digging I've done online I've found this formula thus far:if n is the number of digits, and s is the sum:C(n+s-1 , n-1) where C denotes "choose" as in C(n , k) "n choose k" which can be solved by(n! / [ (n-k)! * k! ] )this seems to work for situations where the sum is < 10, or so claims the forum I found.I whipped it all up into a scheme function if anyone wants to take advantage:;;factorial: num -> num;;finds factorial of num.(define (factorial num)(if (or (= num 1) (= num 0))1(* num (factorial (sub1 num)))));;==========================;;xchy: num num -> num;;the "n choose k" function(define (xchy n k)(/ (factorial n)(* (factorial(- n k))(factorial k))));;==========================;;n-dig&sum-s: num num -> num;;finds the number of n digit combinations with sum s;;C(n+s-1,n-1)(define (n-dig&sum-s n s)(xchy (sub1 (+ n s))(sub1 n)))
No, Nicholas Sparks is not a character in "The Slave Dancer" by Paula Fox. The novel follows the story of a young boy named Jessie Bollier who gets taken captive by pirates and forced to play the fife on a slave ship. Nicholas Sparks is a popular author known for writing romance novels.
Ronald S. Dancer was born in 1949.
Perhaps you mean "Jessie's Girl"; by Rick Springfield.
Jessie Lloyd O'Connor has written: 'Harvey and Jessie' -- subject(s): Biography, Radicals, Working class
Jessie Urquhart has written: 'Wayside' -- subject(s): Accessible book
Do you mean the song Jessie's girl? if so, it's Rick Springfield.
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no Ulysses grant was not a slave
Jessie Athen Bloodworth has written: 'The personal side' -- subject(s): Unemployed
Jessie Perry Stratford has written: 'The kingdom of Butler' -- subject(s): History
Jessie Rubenstone has written: 'Knitting for beginners' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Knitting
Jessie Robson Bothwell has written: 'A health to Regina' -- subject(s): History