C of E is the British slang for the Church of England.
For example 'the Queen is head of the C of E'.
The distance around a circle is called the circumference. The formula for the circumference of a circle is C = πd, where C is the circumference, d is the diameter, and π is approximately 3.14159. For a circle with a diameter of 18 inches, the circumference would be C = π(18) = 56.5487 inches.
Oh my Gosh! I thought I was the only person who remembers this! They used to make us recite this in first grade, back in the 70s! I recited this for my wife and kids just a few minutes ago, and they all thought I was nuts. Then I ran a search online of this chant. It seems you're the only person who remembers it.
The main difference between c and c++ is the concept of 'Object Oriented Programming' (OOPS). Thus c does not have the benefits of oops like: 1. abstraction 2. encapsulation 3. inheritance 4. polymorphism etc.
You add c squared and b squared together to get a squared. This is based on the Pythagorean theorem, which states that in a right triangle, the square of the hypotenuse (a) is equal to the sum of the squares of the other two sides (b and c).
The "I before E except after C rule" is a rhyme to help you remember that correct order is ie unless the preceding letter is c or the combination is being pronounced as an "A".
You mean 'C of E'. This is commonly used to refer to the Church of England. For example: 'The C of E is bankrupt again'.
When we say a person has a "different take" from another person, we mean they think of a problem or situation in different ways. And anything that "slightly different" is different but not VERY different. For example... Suppose Person A says, "If someone asks me for money for food it is because he is out of luck and hungry, so I always give him a dollar." Person B says, "If someone asks me for money for food and I have the feeling that he is sincerely trying to improve his life, I give him a dollar." Person C says, "If someone doesn't have a job, let him starve." Person B has a slightly different take from Person A. Person C has a very different take from Person A.
Theo says that a and b are factors of c is this correct
It means if some one looks up to you, or praises you, that the man speaking will praise or look up to the other person looking up to you. Person (A) Person who looks up to you Person (B) Speaking man Person (C) You Person (A) looks up to Person (C). Person (B) says that he will praise any one who praises Person (C). If that diagram thingy mabobber helps, just say thanks in your head. THX ^_^
The BB stands for British Broadcasting. The C is for Corporation.
Morse Code is boring to translate _________________________________________________________ It says "Gaz". C Ning
· callous
Exactly what is says. Example: double pi= 3.1415; switch (pi) { /* wrong! */
J. C. Bamford, a British manufacturer of heavy industrial and agricultural vehicles; hence JCB can also mean a backhoe digger/excavator in Britain and EuropeSee http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._C._Bamford_(person)
The answer is C, ocupado. The question says, There's a person in the seat. It is.... occupied. (C)
means he likes you, you stupid c unt
on my 05 mercedes c class. the light says engine oil level reduce oil level. what does this mean?