No particular brand name is needed. It is the alcohol content that preserves the wine (alcohol is a preservative). Wine and spirits were frequently taken on voyages due to the lack of fresh water. The history behind Port was that wine was being transported on sea voyages yet the wine was spoiling (turning into vinegar In order to stop the spoilage brandy was added to the wine (brandy doesn't spoil). Long history made short, this beverage became known as Port.
"How to asses Req of working capital in IT Company?" "How to asses Req of working capital in IT Company?"
There are no medusas in The Sims 2 unless your referring to a console version, but on PC, you can be : A Zombie, (req. University) A Vampire (req. Night Life) Build a Servo (sim can't become one, but can build one, req. Open for Business) A Zombie (req. Pets) A Plantsim (req. Seasons) Befriend a Bigfoot who laters moves in (req. Bon Voyage) And a Witch (req. Apartment Life) With FreeTime you get a Genie but he's not necessairly a creature that you can play)
Meter Maid (req. 75 str & your karma must be atleast 1, pays $32) Gumshoe (req. 90 str, pays $38) Highway Patrol (req. 115 str, pays $50) State Trooper (req. 140 str, pays $65) Captain (req. 178 str, pays $82) Undercover Agent (req. 210 str, pays $101) SWAT Team (req. 255 str, pays $119) Special Agent (req. 311 str, pays $138) Hostage Negotiator (req. 359 str, pays $150) Chief of Police (req. 419 str, pays $165, receive a combat shotgun upon promotion)
req.
req reqIt is often abbreviated with "req", though the military sometimes uses "rqm" (according to www.abbreviations.com).
Ah, the abbreviation for "requirement" is simply "req." It's like a little shortcut to help us communicate more efficiently. Just a small way to make things a bit easier and smoother as we go about our day.
Request, required or requisition.
The answer is in the manual.
Resistors (R) in series are added by... Req = R1 + R2 + R3 + ... + Rn In parallel... 1/Req = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + ... + 1/Rn or Req = 1/(1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + ... + 1/Rn)
Yes. The equivalent resistance of resistors in parallel is written as 1/Req=1/R1+1/R2+1/R3+... which, in this case, would be 1/Req=1/1000+1/1000+1/1000+1/1000=0.004. This means that Req=1/0.004=250Ohms.
20 I believe
One meaning is that it may be used as an abbreviation for the word required.