The past is often viewed as a continuous and unquantifiable timeline filled with countless events, experiences, and memories. While we can count specific historical milestones or personal memories, the vastness of the past makes it impossible to assign a definitive numerical value to it. Ultimately, how much of the past one can count depends on individual perspectives and the significance of those moments.
Flew is the past tense of fly; counted is the past tense of count.
counted
depends on the denomination of the dollar, a penny will take alot longer then 100 bills, also depends if you can count past 10
a count and countess own a castle and are like the king and queen but do not have as much power
0.5 micron is least count of cmm machine
Flew is the past tense of fly; counted is the past tense of count.
The past participle is counted.
The past tense is counted.
counted
counted
Counted
if i told you, could you spell it? can you in fact count past the number ten?
you count the dots on the pharos
The noun 'past' is a non-count noun as a word for the period of times before the present.The noun 'past' is a count noun as a word for the history of a person or a thing; the plural noun is pasts.The word 'past' is also an adjective, an adverb, and a preposition.
Black people today and in the past count as the whole person they are. The claim that they were worth 3/5 of a white person is not true. The Constitution counted them as 3/5 toward representation, which was a compromise between those who didn't want them represented and those who thought they should count fully.
to much to count
The difference between much and many is, much means you can't count it but many means you can count it