i dont know so find out your self
You pronounce it something like "OY ESS (like the name of the letter) LOO-nes".
It is pronounced yo-HAH-nes GAYRT-ner.
"Siarad wedyn" is how you write "speak later" in Welsh.
No. Amphetami nes is a ge neric name. O nly bra nd names are capitalized. Capitalize amphetami nes o nly if it is used i n the begi n ni ng of the se nte nce.
It is pronounced as "bweh-nos dee-ahs." The emphasis is on the first syllable of "buenos" and the second syllable of "dias."
The nes was released in 1985 in America, Europe, and Australia. The famicom, witch was the Japanese nes) was released in 1983.
The first game to come out in the series was of course simply The Legend of Zelda. It was originally released in Japan on the Famicon (a system that's equivelent to the NES, but this was only in Japan.) in 1986. If you're looking for the American answer, that would be the game of the same name on the NES (Nintendo Entertainment System) which came out one year later then its Japanese counterpart.
Macit Gu nes has written: 'The design of low-noise microwave bipolar transistor amplifiers'
the bad ones, ljn, the good one, some Japanese company
1985. The Japanese version, or the family home computer system was released in Japan and the US in 1984.
Ir. R. Nes has written: 'Design of multimodal transport networks' -- subject(s): Urban transportation, Planning, Mathematical models, Local transit, Traffic engineering
The average price appears to be around 70 to 100 dollars. There are different condition ones that sell for different prices but if it were an average Nintendo NES System it would be about this price.
Had Nes was created in 1989.
The only way to do so is to get the Japanese version of the game. In the Japanese version, R.O.B. has a white color scheme due to the NES accessory having this color scheme in Japan.
No the Snes wasn't backwards compatible. The cartridges were also different shapes.
You can't unless you take out the lock out chip in the NES console
(I think) An NES cart is an NES cartridge that are the equivalent of modern day DS chips and Xbox CDs. They contain data, which, when used with an NES, can play a game.