Force Can Never Be Destroyed. It just changes from one form to another...
lots of battleships and cruisers and the British naval force destroyed the German naval force and was number 1
Jackson was successful at outmaneuvering a larger Union force and nearly destroyed it
Jackson was successful at outmaneuvering a larger Union force and nearly destroyed it
They were part of a larger Greek force which was withdrawn. The Spartan contingent selflessly remained to hold the pass when the force was withdrawn to let them escape, and was eventually overwhelmed.
He did it by force - they were not 'united', they were under his control. When Thebes revolted, he destroyed the city and sold its inhabitants into slavery as a warning to the others.
It got destroyed because the force or pressure of the tsunami was too strong.
lots of battleships and cruisers and the British naval force destroyed the German naval force and was number 1
yes! because you are building something and remember when something is build is called constructive force and when something is destroyed is called a destructive force
I believe Odysseus destroyed the city of troy
Inertia can not be destroyed, because inertia is a form of energy and energy can not be created or destroyed it is changed into a different form of energy like light, heat, chemical, or physical energy.
Anything can be destroyed with the right application of force - be it pressure, chemicals, water, fire, etc. Though there will always be something left behind - ashes, gas, etc.
No, I don't believe that Frax of "Power Rangers Time Force" deserved to be destroyed in the 3-part finale of Time Force, he definitely showed goodness inside of him especially because of the fact that he was a human inside of a robot body so I do believe Frax should have turned good instead of being destroyed.
he wanted to force India to convert to Islam
he wanted to force India to convert to Islam
Yes he did after he destroyed their culture religion
By the Persian king Xerxes.
The commander was Commodore George Dewey.