Wow mom
The sentence "Sentences can be written in active and passive voices" is a declarative sentence written in passive voice.
When the sentence has nothing to do with the paragraph that is written.
Since the verb in this sentence is "written", the helping verb is "have".
The sentence which uses FOLLOWS in a sentence can we written as this. The horse follows the train in the movie.
The correct verb in the sentence is 'has written'. The word 'written' is the main verb; the word 'has' is the auxiliary verb.
The only state that has this type of symmetry when written horizontally is OHIO. If the letters are written vertically, then HAWAII, IOWA and UTAH also have symmetry.
B c d e h i m x o are vertical
The states that have reflectional symmetry when written vertically in capital letters is Hawaii, Ohio, Iowa, and Utah. * * * * * A does not have horizontal symmetry - it has a vertical axis of symmetry. So only OHIO remains.
One phrase that has reflectional symmetry when written horizontally is "Too hot to hoot."
One of the four states that have names with refectionsl symmetry when written vertically in capital letters is Hawaii. Not sure how HAWAII works, but OHIO should be one. The two others are IOWA and UTAH.
OHIO possibly?
In capitals, two of them are COKE and CODE
O h i o
Ohio Hawaii The symmetry applies to the name of the state when it is written vertically, not to the state itself. And also, who normally writes the name of anything vertically?
im not sure of this either....im sitting here trying to do my math homework...and this samme question is stumping me...Ohio,Utah,Hawaii,and Iowa have symmetry when written verticaly
OHIO, IOWA, HAWAII Except that the symmetry applies to the name of the state when it is written vertically, not to the state itself. And also, who normally writes the name of a state vertically?
Languages written vertically, from right to leftChinese (all dialects, more commonly written vertically in Taiwan)Chữ-nômJapanese (can be written either vertically or horizontally)Korean (since the 1980s, horizontal is more common)KulitanMeroïtic (Hieroglyphic script)NushuTangut (Hsihsia)Languages written vertically, from left to rightOld ElamiteManchuMongolianOirat Clear ScriptPhags-paSogdianSutton SignWritingUyghurLanguages written vertically, from left to right, bottom to topBatak (Indonesia)Hanunoo (the Philippines)Tagbanwa (the Philippines)