B
from meagan.lewis
B
from meagan.lewis
Ah, what a lovely question! Both "in your letter" and "on your letter" can be correct, depending on the context. If you're referring to something written inside the letter, you would say "in your letter." If you're talking about something physically attached to the outside of the letter, you would say "on your letter." Just follow your heart and use whichever feels right in the moment.
A portcullis was used as a big metal door at the front of a castle, there was sometimes two of them so if the enemy got past the first one he would be stuck in the middle and they would pour e.g boiling oil on him
He could use his troops on the western front and not worry about the eastern front (Russia).
XXXL is not a real Roman numeral L = 50 and X = 10. Putting a 'smaller' letter in front of a 'larger' one was a way to signify "less than" so that XL = 40.... 10 less than 50. But the Romans would not have put three consecutive Xs in front of an L. Doing that would tend to indicate 30 less than 50, but that equals 20 and 20 was always represented by XX. Only one lesser numeral was ever put in front of a larger one. X = 10 XX = 20 XXX = 30 XL = 40 L = 50 LX = 60 LXX = 70 LXXX = 80 XC = 90 C = 100
You would use the unilateral "alphabet" which consists of 24 phonetic symbols. Just match the closest symbol to each letter of your name.
Yes
U from uranium235U and 238U (recommended); also possible U-235 and U-238 or uranium-235 and uranium-238.
Cars would use shocks or struts in front but not both.
GT Navy Army Airforce
You use an like this" I would love an apple.
All US Presidents use Air Force 1.
Absolute references are very useful in a spreadsheet. You would use them when you want to refer to a cell that is going to be a fixed value in a cell. If that value is likely to change from time to time, it is better to implement it in a cell and use an absolute reference. So for example: Go to B1 and type in 10% Then go to A2 and type in any value. Put something into A3 and A4 and so on, down to about A10. Now say you want to find 10% of all of those numbers. In B2 type: =A2*$B$1 It will give you 10% of the value in A2. Then copy it down to through all the cells to B10. If you look at the formula you will see they all use $B$2 but the A2 that was in the first formula will be A3 in the second formula and so on. You'll get 10% of all the cells in column A, because all the formulas are looking at cell B2 where the 10% is. Now change the 10% to something else. All the values in the formulas in column B will now change to multiply by the new value, because they are all looking at cell B1. You did not need to change any of the formulas. If you had originally done =A2*10% in B2, you would have had to change all the formulas to the new value. Using absolute references is more efficient. Another good example of the use of absolute references is for getting running totals. As an example, try this: Put values in all the cells from A1 to A10. Then go into B1 and type the following formula: =SUM(A$1:A1) Copy the formula down through the cells to B10 and you will have a list of running totals in column B. There are a lot of other ways of using absolute cells. As the last formula shows, you don't always need to use two $ symbols when doing them. In fact, the in the first example, it would have worked if it was B$1. There are reasons for using just one dollar or putting the dollar before the letter instead of the number, but that is more complex to explain. Rest assured that there are many reasons for using absolute cell referencing and they can save you a lot of work.
Military airplanes with big, powerful jet engines and lots of things that go boom!
It would require 5 toothpicks to spell the word "hat." The letter "h" would use 2 toothpicks, the letter "a" would use 2 toothpicks, and the letter "t" would use 1 toothpick.
Grams and kilograms are measurement of weight. For a letter you would use grams. For a package you would use kilograms as it weight is more.
You would use "a" in front of "utopia" because "utopia" starts with a consonant sound (the "yoo" sound). Therefore, the correct phrase is "a utopia."
No. I would use "front-end or back-end load." Use a hyphen when "front-end" or "back-end" is being used as an adjective, otherwise do not.