C = (30n+295) over (n-5)
Answer: n = (-5C-295) over (30-C)
This question has already been answered along with details on how to work it out.
it equals a hole or 1
there should be a little hole on it somewhere the u stick somthing in side of it then you just change it
Type your answer here... I AM A DWARF AND I AM DIGGING A HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! HOLE HOLE, DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! DIGGING DIGGING HOLE! HOLE HOLE, DIGGING DIGGING HOLE!
5/16 hole X 4 inch on a flat bottom hole: This will depend on the material, and tools available. Use a 1/8 bit, then 5/16. If you are not sure how deep the drill bit is in the hole, paint white out on the bit as your 4 inch mark so you can see it while the drill is spinning. If the material is metal, you will need coolant. To get the flat bottom: it wood, put a flat ended bolt into the hole and hammer, it will flatten the hole, it metal, forget about it, the hole is quite flat, and a pain in the butt to change. :-)
no. a hole is a hole no matter how deep it is, you can't have a half unless you compare it to another hole.
it equals a hole or 1
Helen G. Hole has written: 'Things civil and useful' -- subject(s): Education, Society of Friends
he lived in a hole with a 7 to 8 change of getting out of the hole so that's why he started to invent things because he had nothing better to do
a hole forms in the enamel. it can be caused by many things. but decay begins and this hole progresses until it eventual reaches a nerve and becomes infected.
the things that happen in a gator hole are having a ashole
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It is a hole because it brings things inside of it, but it's all black so you can't see anything.
To change aquario from spike mode to its hole form you have to pull it down to change it to hole mode and push it upward for spike mode
you have got to change the hole bumper
Yes
things dont implode in a black hole they are dragged in and the black hole gets bigger
The word "sinkhole" originates from the Middle Low German term "sinken" which means to sink, and "hohl" which means hole. It has been used in English since the 18th century to describe a depression or hole in the ground caused by the collapse of surface layer materials.