I have a computer. I have a printer.
indeterminate sentencing
The word master test is hard. It is really a bunch of analogies, and as you get older they get MUCH HARDER. You would really think analogies are easy but word master's analogies not so easy. It is not just yellow:bannah:purple:grape. It is more like Painter: Musem_______:_____ . Then in the blanks you would have to fill in the answer, for example doctor: hospital, kitchen: cook, writer: Library, photographer: camera's, architect: ruler. The answer would be kitchen: cook. Then to add, on you have to learn list of 25 words including:besmirch, archipelago, throng. Those are only 3 examples of 25 words. They only give GATE students and opportunity to do this. Believe it or not the examples of words I gave you came straight from the word masters list. Word masters is also hard because you have to take a test based on fitting in your word masters words into the analogy.
These stories are a unique chronicle of our time.
25s. Not 25's, which is the possessive of 25 (as in house number 25's garden).
Examples of common nouns:appleboatcouchdaggereggfoamgorillaharpicejoykneelollipopmothernotionoperapurposequailrocksteakteacherurchinvalleyworkbenchyogurtzoologist
He was in an exile for almost 25 years
A square number, like 4, 9 and 25.
1+1=2 2x2=4 50-25=25 If a square has 4 edges, 4 corners, and 4 lines of simitary, then what does a rectangle have?
4 and 9 25 and 26 30 and 49 98 and 99
no it is not it has to be like this for it to be a number sentence......... 5x5=25........P.S..25 is the answer
There is no such sentence.
Grammarian A. S. Hornby suggested a list of 25 sentence structures divided into 5 basic sentence structures in 25 groups with a total of 52 patterns.
its a determined sentence I believe
it no 25
Well, 25 years. By statute, you should receive a minimum and maximum sentence. Unless you received a flat sentence, under which you would serve the full sentence, if 25 years is that sentence. In most cases, if 25 years is your statutory minimum, count on an additional 12 or more years before parole. Hope for the best; prepare for the worst.
25