bla bla bla hahahahahhahah panget nang nagbabasa n2 ble :P =P
Because it is so high
The Great Pyramid of Egypt.
I think was alright on every account. are you high?
King Władysław I Łokietek (Władysław the Elbow-high) in the first half of 14th century.
At the beginning of the High Middle Ages, the architecture was Romanesque. Later in that time, the Gothic emerged.
High tide and low tide times shift later each day due to the Moon's orbit around the Earth. As the Earth rotates on its axis, the position of the Moon changes, causing the timing of the tides to lag behind by about 50 minutes each day. This is because the Moon takes approximately 27.3 days to complete its orbit around the Earth, while the Earth rotates once every 24 hours. As a result, high and low tides occur later each day.
(706 in a leap year)One tidal cycle is 12 hours and 26 minutes long (roughly), experiencing one high and one low tide.8760hrs in a year divided by 12.433 hrs = 704Joy.http://geography.about.com/od/physicalgeography/a/tides.htm
Yes they do
In any high-low game, the pot is split. Just sometimes one person "scoops" both high and low and is effectively given half the pot for their high hand and half for their low hand. In the situation you describe, each player takes half the pot.
In professional soccer, 90 minutes plus a half time break. Each half is 45 minutes.In high school soccer, each half is 40 minutes in length.
Half an hour each.
The motto of Kenowa Hills High School is 'High levels of learning for each and every student'.
About as good as the chances of them getting a divorce later on.
A football match lasts 90 minutes (1 hour and a half), each half is 45 minutes with a 15 minute break in the middle.
no you can do each mission at any time (if you've unlocked that mission)
You will not specialize into astrophysics until later in your education, but you should take physics, chem, and every math course.
Daily high and low tides occur later each day due to the Moon's orbit around the Earth. As the Earth rotates on its axis, the Moon moves in its orbit, causing the timing of high and low tides to shift by about 50 minutes later each day. This is because it takes approximately 24 hours and 50 minutes for the Earth to complete one full rotation relative to the Moon. Consequently, the gravitational pull of the Moon that causes the tides also shifts, leading to this delay.