The brakes apply force to the wheel, causing friction which stops it.
Because a bicycle is built thing, built by humans. It's not born from another bicycle, it's not harvested from a bicycle tree / bush /plant. Humans thought them out and humans made them, and they're complicated enough to be called a system.
This is not an example of metaphor, for instance.
Vector is magnitude and direction. As opposed to scalar having only direction. Example: Velocity Acceleration Applying this to a question could be observeted as the bus moved 40km/h in a East direction.
give me example in product or solution
a great example is the peppered moth. look up the full story in wikipedia
applying brakes on a bicycle to slow down. that's friction because when you apply the brakes, the tires of the bicycle slide on the road causing friction on the road from your tires to slow you down faster
A bicycle is an example of a complex machine.
Bicycle
Cosmetology is the skill or work of treating with or applying cosmetics, as in a beauty shop; beauty culture.You have to describe a specific product of cosmetics or beauty culture etc. for example mascara
anything thats a non example of a percent is the answer
it was invented by the example of the bicycle.
pulley
No a ramp would be an example.
Roger's attempt to jump his bicycle ended badly when the ramp slipped out of place.
Your bicycle may be squeaking because it is rusty. The gears, for example, on the bicycle may be rubbing together and causing friction, thus creating the squeaking noise. Try lubricating your bicycle with WD-40.
Yes. An example is when Mulga Bill calls the bicycle a two-wheeled outlaw.
No, the word 'larger' is the comparative form of the adjective large (larger, largest). An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:"Jack got a larger bicycle for his birthday. He gave his old bicycle to his smaller cousin."The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Jack' in the second sentence.The adjective 'larger' describes the noun 'bicycle'.