The correct spelling is 'precise mechanics.' 'Precise' means exact or accurate, so precise mechanics refers to detailed and accurate mechanics in a specific context.
Mechanics of arnis
The two divisions of mechanics are classical mechanics and quantum mechanics. Classical mechanics deals with macroscopic objects moving at speeds much slower than the speed of light, while quantum mechanics deals with the behavior of very small particles at the atomic and subatomic level.
Classical mechanics is the alternative to quantum mechanics. It is a branch of physics that describes the motion of macroscopic objects using principles established by Isaac Newton. Unlike quantum mechanics, classical mechanics assumes that objects have definite positions and velocities at all times.
Within their own universe that is, to some degree, governed by cartoon physics they probably could. They probably could not stop one operating on real-world mechanics.
The correct spelling is 'precise mechanics.' 'Precise' means exact or accurate, so precise mechanics refers to detailed and accurate mechanics in a specific context.
The correct possessive form of the plural noun mechanics is mechanics', as in your question.Example: Both mechanics' opinion of the problem was different.
There are a couple of questions :)
If you mean "Mechanicanlage", it means "mechanics plant" or "mechanics factory".=========================================================The grammatically correct form is mechanische Anlage and, depending on context, could mean mechanical plant, or more usually, mechanical layout, plan, draft or design.
Either it's correct, or there's an error - there are no "correct errors".
Yes, you can correct a check that has errors by voiding it and writing a new one with the correct information.
auto correct
Depends on the overbite and the mechanics used by the ortho.
Of course. Every human, and every scientist, makes some errors. Nobody gets things right ALL the time. Even Albert Einstein has been proven wrong about some things. Einstein distrusted quantum mechanics, referring to quantum mechanics' somewhat random elements saying "God does not throw dice with the universe". But Einstein was wrong about that. Every scientist makes mistakes; the point is to acknowledge them when you discover your errors, and correct them.
detect the errors and make it correct
detect the errors and make it correct
It's no theory -- it happens. In classical mechanics, an electron of (let's say) 9 eV of energy could not possibly get past a potential difference wall of 10 volts. In quantum mechanics, there is a non-zero probability of it happening. It depends on the thickness of the voltage barrier. And experiments have long since shown the theory is correct.