The previous response was " 'tow the line'.... in reference to- pulling your weight, doing your share, etc." This is incorrect. The correct phrase is "Toe the line", as in "put your toes on this line next to everyone else." It may be a Navy reference. Some links:
http://grammartips.homestead.com/toetheline.html http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toe_the_line
It depends on their orientation - back to front (in contact), back to front with a 30 cm gap, or head to toe. * If the line were 1 cm units the line would be 1,100,000 km long. * The in contact line would then be (at 30 cm/person) 33,000,000 km long * The 30 cm gap line 66,000,000 km * The head to to toe line (80 cm/unit) 88,000,000 km
It should be two, not tow. 280 292 000
What AREN'T the names of the tow sides?
The word toe has 1 syllable.The word toe has one syllable.
Roughly as long as 14 average-size adult North American male people lying down in a line, head-to-toe.
tow
The homonym for 'toe' is 'tow'. 'Toe' refers to a part of the foot, while 'tow' refers to pulling or dragging something behind with a rope or chain.
A homophone for "toe" is "tow", as in to pull something behind a vehicle.
The answer is toe
You can call a tow (toe) truck. LOL!!
"Did you have to tow your car after the accident?"
no
Mow,sew,toe,crow,row,low
A tow head is someone who is born with platinum white hair.
The homonym for towed is toad. Toad and towed.
The idiomatic expression "to toe the line" means to conform to rules or standards. For example, you could use it in a sentence like "It is important for employees to toe the line when it comes to following company policies and procedures."
tow, toe sail, sale wave, waive tract, tracked