"Bread and Butter" 3 times
Split, splinter, crack, smash, destroy
In the North Pole, you can say hello by using a cheerful greeting such as "Hello" or "Hi there!" You may also want to say "Good day" or "Greetings" to keep it casual and friendly in such a cold and remote environment.
The compass needle is magnetic so has a north pole and a south pole. North attracts north and south attracts south so the compass needle points to the north pole (you could say it - the other end- points to the south pole too).
No of course not. That is a myth that resulted from a rather result of tornado damage. A telephone pole was found split open with a straw inserted. However, it is more likely that the winds from the tornado split the pole and then the straw got stuck in the resulting gap afterwards. Lets not forget tornados can be as much as twice as strong as hurricanes, and far more dangerous.
No, a 2 pole breaker is designed for a 240-volt circuit or for two separate 120-volt circuits that are out of phase with each other. For a 120-volt single-phase circuit, you would typically use a single-pole breaker.
A split digraph is when a vowel digraph is split by a consonant, such as the 'e' at the end of a word making the vowel say its name as in "time" or "hope." It occurs when an 'e' at the end of a word changes the short vowel sound to a long vowel sound.
There is 1 syllable in the word pole.
You may say 'wakeru,' written: 分ける
this is the french word for banana split banane split Hope it helps
pole
An understatement is a comment that does not reflect true severity of a situation. An example might be to say, "The North Pole is chilly." The word "chilly" does not effectively indicate how cold it is at the North Pole.
It is split.
well banana split is a compound word
A synonym for the word split is divide or separate.
If someone is leaving, you can say they split, they vamoosed, they beat it, or they got the heck out of Dodge.
Pole (north and south POLE)
"Split" is an irregular verb that doesn't change in the past tense.