About two dozen flat bones stacked on each other.
See link for illustration.
Right side steering column where dash and column meet. Stock flasher is about the size of a shot glass and looks like a tin can.
The text tool looks like the letter A in the right hand column of tool buttons 4th from the bottom
Assuming you're using Microsoft Excel, select the entire column by clicking and dragging with the mouse, then press the AutoSum button (looks like Σ).
It looks like whatever in an Excel file. With defined column names on the first row and each row below contains data.
column heading is like a tingy
Under the dash and just above the steering column to the right, you can get to it if you take the cover off the interior fuse box. Looks like this...
There's a red latch on the driver side, beneath the steering column on the left. It looks like a hood pop, or a parachute exit.
Since 100, 99 & 98 have no sevens we can limit our search to 1 - 97. There will be ten 7's in the ones column and one 7 in the tens column. So it looks like eleven 7's is the answer.
It looks like 18,000,000It looks like 18,000,000It looks like 18,000,000It looks like 18,000,000
Under the dash near the steering column. Kinda looks like a metal bottle cap, with one conncector. F. garay
It looks as if you want to do a lookup - look up data in a table, in one column, and return the value next to it, in another column. The vlookup() function does just that.
To clear the first column formatting in Microsoft Word, select the entire first column by clicking and dragging your mouse over it. Then, go to the "Home" tab and click on the "Clear All Formatting" button, which looks like an eraser on an A (or use the shortcut Ctrl + Space). This will remove any specific formatting applied to that column, returning it to the default style. Alternatively, you can right-click and select "Paragraph" to manually adjust settings like indentation or alignment.