I am wondering the same thing!
Roman Numerals are just another way of writing numbers. The same as using the Chinese Numerals, or even our very own Arabic Numerals. Tally is another way of noting numbers. So anything could, in essence, precede or follow Roman Numerals, that could precede or follow Arabic Numerals or Tallies.
No, a crescent is not a polygon. It is the area between two arcs of different radii that intersect each other.Theoretically, the crescent could be considered to be a polygon with an infinite number of infinitesimally small sides, but that is not the standard interpretation.
languages
In Arabic, "namira" does not have a specific meaning. It is not a common Arabic word and does not have a readily available definition. It could possibly be a name or a term that is specific to a particular cultural or regional context.
Could be italic or possibly copperplate.
Ottoman Turkish and Arabic had different writing systems: the Ottoman Turkish alphabet used Latin, Arabic, and Chinese figures, but Arabic only uses Arabic figures. To learn Ottoman Turkish, you could go to http://iwannalearnancient.com. The website is written in Arabic, but on the top you should find the Translate this Page, and translate into English or whatever language you speak.
The scholar's at Cordoba studied Greek and Roman scientific writings and translated them into Arabic so, Arabic writing in mathematics, astronomy, geography, and history could be studied throughout Europe.
Depends it could be first or last quarter phases if you are talking about both crescent moons or just the frist crescent waxing crescent. If you are talking about the other crescent the phase that comes before it is last quarter.
It was adapted for se by Latin and Greek, and so the basis of writing today.
You could go on Edexcel GCSE Arabic
Fake = mozawwar or mesh 7aqeqe ( in Arabic ) and could be in Egyptian. and it written in Arabic this way : مزور
So that they could farm their fields.
The land of the Fertile Crescent could support agriculture and grazing, and was located between two major rivers that could be used for transport.
Roman Numerals are just another way of writing numbers. The same as using the Chinese Numerals, or even our very own Arabic Numerals. Tally is another way of noting numbers. So anything could, in essence, precede or follow Roman Numerals, that could precede or follow Arabic Numerals or Tallies.
hoogoom
Syraj has a site for teaching Arabic that has cartoons on it. There is also a new Cartoon Network that is broadcasted in the Arabic language. Most Arabic cartoons are used for teaching.
theres habbo