Passports have holes punched in them to indicate that they are no longer valid and to prevent them from being used for travel. This is a common practice to ensure that the passport cannot be used fraudulently.
No, a passport with holes punched in it is considered damaged and invalid for international travel.
When a passport has a hole punched in it, it usually means that the passport is no longer valid or has been canceled. This could be due to expiration, loss, theft, or damage. It is important to replace a passport with a hole punched in it before traveling internationally.
Yes, traveling with a hole-punched passport is not recommended as it may not be accepted by immigration authorities.
Paper itself does not have holes, but it can contain punched holes if it has been hole-punched. Printing paper is typically flat and continuous without holes.
Holes punched from paper are commonly referred to as "paper punches" or "punched holes." The resulting pieces of paper are often called "paper waste" or "punch-outs." In specific contexts, such as in three-ring binders, these holes may also be referred to as "binding holes."
perforations
The common nouns in the sentence are:conductor, subject of the sentence;holes, direct object of the verb 'punched';tickets, object of the preposition 'in'.
A punch card are cards with punched holes in them that represent data. You feed them into a (usually) large-scale computer that can accept them.
It had holes punched in it.
Does it have holes punched in it? That would mean it was voided.
When a couple of gooks tongue punched eachothers fart holes.
Because they are a bunch of a-holes. Let that be a lesson to all you other a-holes out there. Quit or get punched in the face (or your show canceled).