To provide a meaningful answer, could you please specify who "her" refers to? This will help me identify and outline her successes accurately.
1763?? Are you sure??
KITTIES!
meep .__.
they completed their mission with no trouble.
they had ma la has and having great significantas
1763?? Are you sure??
he did not have an successes.
The "oh" is slang for zero. So the phrase would actually be zero for three if correct English were being used. This refers to zero successes for three tries at something. In baseball this could mean the batter has had three attempts at hitting the ball but zero successes at making meaningful contact, that three players have been out to bat but zero have succeeded in making it back to home base, or the team has had three games but won none of them.
The team's successes led it to a championship.
Your interviewers do not want to hear my successes - they want to hear about YOUR successes. Just tell them honestly what you've done at work that was a success.
some successes were that massachusetts became a state ( i think)
You can say "after many previous successes" or "after so many previous successes." Both expressions are correct and commonly used.
The plural is successes. As in "recent successes have allowed us to increase your wages".
Two of his greatest successes as Calvin Coolidge president were?
So of Leonard successes are the mona Lisa and the do Vinci code
Successes
Successes and failures are considered to be part of development. In most cases, there will a number of failures before success is achieved.