This is true not only for Britain, but for everywhere in the world. The Sun rises in the east. Sometimes a little north of east, sometimes a little south of east, but generally east.
In reality, the Sun doesn't move; it's the Earth spinning from west to east that makes it appear that way.
True. The rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) appears rough because it is covered with ribosomes, which are responsible for protein synthesis. The presence of ribosomes on the RER gives it a bumpy or rough appearance under a microscope.
True. The rotation of the Earth causes different stars to become visible at night as it changes our perspective in relation to the stars. This effect is known as diurnal motion, where stars appear to rise in the east and set in the west due to the Earth's rotation.
This appears to be a true statement.
That description isn't true at all. In fact, it's just the opposite: Summer is the time of year when the sun rises earliest and sets latest, giving us the longest periods of daylight ... and heating.
Yes, the volcanoes of Hawaii are associated with a hotspot in the Earth's mantle, known as the Hawaiian hotspot. This hotspot is not directly connected to the East Pacific Rise, which is a separate tectonic plate boundary where new oceanic crust is formed. The hotspot remains stationary while the Pacific Plate moves over it, creating a chain of volcanoes as the plate migrates.
yes
Everything in the sky appears to rise in the east and set in the west. That's a true general statement,although no "New York Star" is known to modern Astronomy.
yes
The Sun rises in the East, generally. At high latitudes, the Sun can appear to rise in the northeast or in the southeast, but there is always at least a LITTLE bit of east in the direction.
The sun always rises in the East and sets in the West. Depending on the season, it may rise more or less north or south of east, and set more or less north or south of west, but there's always at least a fair component of "east" in the rising, and "west" in the setting. Regardless of whether you are in the Northern or the Southern Hemisphere, the sun rises in the east and sets in the west. The difference between the hemispheres, however, is that in the Northern, the sun travels across the southern sky, whereas in the south, the sun travels across the northern sky. In true point of fact, the Sun doesn't really "rise" anywhere; the Sun fundamentally remains in the middle of the solar system. The Sun APPEARS to rise, because the Earth is spinning; the Sun (and Moon, and stars, and everything else) seem to rise in the East, because the Earth is spinning from west to east. The Earth spins west-to-east once every 24 hours.
Dungeness on the Kent Coastline. However, it only outwardly appears as a desert, it is not a true desert as the precipitation it receives is too much to consider it as a true desert.
In reality it does neither. The movement that we call sunrise and sunset are only apparent movements; they seem to be movements of the sun. This happens because of the true spinning of the earth on its axis.
The Loyalists stayed true to Britain and the king.
There are no true deserts in Britain.
NO it is not true an OBJECT appears colour because it reflect that colour
When you start word a new blank document appears true or false?
True.