We did a similar one:
Big X
Little x
Question mark
Dot
Spiders crawling everywhere
Even in your underwear
Cool breeze
Tight squeeze
Now you have the chills...
There was more in the middle after the question mark dot... but I can't remember it. And neither can my sisters.. but there are a lot of similar poems that I found when I searched it...
it's only for real kings from chicago.no ny latin king knows this.
the Spanish word for crankshaft is 'cigunal' and the u has 2 dots over it and the n has a squiggly line on top
It is a schwa with a diersis (ə̈) and it's used in very few languages, such as the Proto-Samoyed language.
The answer is however many of the dots of the dice are on the bottom of the dice: if you rolled 1 you would have 6, 2 you would have 5 etc.
Hot, bought, taught, not, caught, fought, snot, blot, forgot, Note: Some of these depend on your accent and pronunciation.
you use dots and dashes in the Morse code
There are gold colored links on the chain and dots/dashes on the sprockets.
Those dots and dashes are vowel points.
The black dots and dashes between states on a map represents the state boundaries. The dots and dashes are used to outline the state.
Morse clicks, called Morse code, are dots and dashes. Dots are the short clicks, while dashes are longer. Morse clicks, called Morse code, are dots and dashes. Dots are the short clicks, while dashes are longer.
Yes, the countries Boundary on a map is always indicated with black dots and dashes.
Samuel Morse developed Morse code for transmitting data using a series of dots and dashes.
The gold colored links on the chain line up with dots/dashes on the sprockets.
Morse code
Dots would last only a short amount of time on a Morse code machine and dashes would be three times that length.
stars are the main details, dashes are the description of the stars, and dots give examples or quotes supporting your star
Actually Morse's original code used dots, dashes, long dashes, and very long dashes. It also used 5 different lengths of gaps. This was greatly simplified by the adoption of the International Morse Code (largely developed in Germany then modified a bit by international agreements) to just dots and dashes. The number of different length gaps was also reduced to only 3.