MM is for the month you were born. So, if its January it would be 01.
DD is for the day you were born. So if its on the 1st, it is 01
YYYY is for the year you were born. So, if its 1995
01/01/1997
64 divided by 8 is 8. 1 cm = 10 mm. 8 multiplied by 10 is 80. 80 mm.
Recessive. Dominant alleles are expressed in both homozygous and heterozygous individuals (DD or Dd), but recessive alleles are only expressed in homozygous individuals (dd).
1 in = 25.4 mm. (150 mm)/(25.4 mm/in) = 5.9055 inches.
because when the errors are not been identified your experiment will be ruined.... wuahahaha .. :DD :D :DD
8 mm = 0.8 cm10 mm = 1 cm20 mm = 2 cm50 mm = 5 cm60 mm = 6 cm500 mm = 50 cm560 mm = 56 cm568 mm = 56.8 cm
If you're in America: MM/DD/YYYY If you're in other countries(except some): DD/MM/YYYY Good luck :)
MM/DD/YYYY
DD/MM/YYYY usually does the trick! :-)
VI/V/MMVI (MM/DD/YYYY) or as people in England write V/VI/MMVI (DD/MM/YYYY)
Most countries use DD/MM/YY or DD/MM/YYYY formats.The US chooses to use MM/DD/YY or MM/DD/YYYY.
"dd mm yyy" is an incomplete date format. It seems to be missing the actual numbers for the day, month, and year. Typically, it should be written as "dd/mm/yyyy" or "dd-mm-yyyy" to represent the actual date.
Officially if you're writing it in a paper or some official document that does not require a specific globally-accepted format (mm-dd-yyyy), it'd be written in yyyy年mm月dd日.
It comes at the end--US: mm/dd/yyyy, everywhere else: dd/mm/yyyy
the only abbreviation I have ever seen for days is the letter d, as in date of birth format, e.g. dd/mm/yyyy or mm/dd/yyyy
In dd/mm/yyyy format, it is XXVIII - V - MCMLXXXVI In mm/dd/yyyy format, it is V - XXVIII - MCMLXXXVI
Depends on the locale. In Denmark it is: DD-MM-YYYY Like: 15-01-2008 Or: DD. MMMM YYYY Like: 15. January 2008 -------------- Just noticed it was in databases: MySQL use: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS
I-VII-MMXI or VII-1-MMXI depending on which date format you use (DD-MM-YYYY or MM-DD-YYYY)