It means Tuesday and Thursday.
Celebrated is the past tense of the verb to celebrate. Celebrate is also a noun and an adjective.celebratevb 1. to rejoice in or have special festivities to mark (a happy day, event, etc)2. (tr) to observe (a birthday, anniversary, etc)3. (tr) to perform (a solemn or religious ceremony), esp to officiate at (Mass)4. (tr) to praise publicly; proclaimFrom Latin celebrāre, from celeber numerous, thronged, renowned◆ celebration (noun)◆ celebrator (noun)◆ celebratory (adj)
TR often means trustee. You see it in property ownership where the property owner may be listed like, "Joseph Smith TR". This means Joe Smith owns the house, but has put it into a trust. Putting your house (and other property) into a trust often avoids the property going into probate when you die. It depends on state law, but it's particularly popular in California.
"tr"generally is used as an abbreviation for the word "transitive" in describing a type of verb, verbs being one of the 8 parts of speech in English. If a verb is transitive, it is an action verb.
Adore: Vb 1. tr to love intensely/deeply 2. to worship ( a god) with religious rites 3. tr Informal - to like very much. EG: I adore chocolate. / I adore that dress.
"Tr." is the usual abbreviation used for "transcript" in court documents and legal citations in the USA. You can reference the Bluebook or the ALWD Citation Manual to see formats for citing transcripts.
T is Tuesday. TR is for Tuesday and Thursday.
tré cool is the drummer for green day.
It's a class for two days. Tuesday and Thursday. Most classes are either MWF or Tuesday and Thursday TR.
Each row in a table starts with the <TR> tag, and the cells are started with the <TD> tags which are inside the TR tags. To remove a specific row just highlight, and delete from <TR> to</TR> for example a table with two rows might look like this: <Table> <TR> <td>first row</td> </TR> <TR> <td>second row</td> </TR> </Table> To remove the first row delete <TR> <td>first row</td> </TR> You will be left with: <Table> <TR> <td>second row</td> </TR> </Table>
Tr = cfm/400
Tr=ton
TR Judd is 5' 9".
Well, darling, TR (547) minus TR (543) is 4. It's as simple as that. Math doesn't have to be a headache, sugar, just a quick calculation.
<style type="text/css">.friendSpace tr td.text table tr td table tr td table tr td a { display: none; } .friendSpace tr td.text table tr td table tr td { display: none; } .friendSpace tr td.text table tr td span { display: none; }</style> or 2.0 .friendSpaceModule { display: none; } or 1.0<style type="text/css">.friendSpace { display:none; }</style> Ps Have funn
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1 tr is equivalent to how many hp?
TR Knight's eyes are green.