11 out of 15 is 73% (rounded up to whole numbers, it is actually 73.333 recurring).
Presumably you're asking what the employee discount is at Mary Kay... Most firms offer staff a 5% discount on anything they buy. The only way to get a definitive answer would be to ask the company directly.
There are no quotation marks in that sentence unless you state who's saying it. "Give me your hand", said Mary, would be correct.
the word many is not an adverb since an adverb is and adjective describing a verb and "Mary ran many" isn't correct. words like quickly and steadily are adverbs.
(a) Mary, the mother of Jesus; (b) Mary Magdalene; (c) Mary, the mother of James; (d) Mary, the mother of Joses; (e) Mary, the wife of Clopas; (f) Mary of Bethany; (g) Mary, the mother of Mark; (h) Mary of Rome; (i) the "other" Mary.
There are no people listed in the Old Testament named Mary. The New Testament contains the Virgin Mary, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James and Joses, Mary the sister of Martha, and Mary the wife of Clopas.
Mary Josephine Booth has written: 'Material on geography' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Geography 'Material on geography which may be obtained free or at small cost' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Geography
The correct phrasing is "I want to present this award to Mary."
John and Mary Everest
It can be--- Queen Mary's ship.
The correct way to write the sentence is "It was Mary and Andrew." This is because "Mary and Andrew" is a plural subject, but the verb "was" agrees with the singular subject "It."
That depends on whether the phrase is a subject or predicate. "Mary and I were married last year." "The pastor married Mary and me."
"Your sisters' names are Rose and Mary."
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It is proper to bow to the name of Jesus, not Mary.
She taught geography at St. Mary's School in Calcutta with the Sisters of Loreto.
The sentence "Is Mary not Happy" is correct grammatically as a question. It defines Mary as the subject and not happy as the object. In the other sentence, though grammatically correct, it could be confusing. Not Mary could be construed as all people but Mary. I would use the first sentence, as it is clearest.
Mary Redempta Grawunder has written: 'Practical nursing review' -- subject(s): Examination questions, Examinations, questions, Practical nursing