Slant rhyme usually feels subtler and less loud. -apex
the difference between perfect and imperfect oligopoly
No, but a perfect square is usually the square of a whole number.
That's not correct English.
perfect competion is a situation where the are many suppliers in the field
Past tense
None, although "perfect square" tends to be used for whole numbers.
Yes, the difference between consecutive perfect square numbers is always odd. If ( n ) is a positive integer, the perfect squares are ( n^2 ) and ( (n+1)^2 ). The difference between them is ( (n+1)^2 - n^2 = 2n + 1 ), which is always odd since ( 2n ) is even and adding 1 results in an odd number. Thus, the difference between any two consecutive perfect squares is consistently odd.
Product differentiation
40
What is the difference between perfect competition and pure monopoly
"i had" is used in past tense and "i have had" is used in past perfect perspective. That is the only difference. no need to get confused.
no that's why i asked Google da