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Form follows function means that the shape of a machine or device will be dictated by what it is designed to do. I have no idea where the "most nearly" fits in.
It could be a form of stalking and it should be reported
Assuming you mean 3/600, it's done as follows: Divide both the numerator and denominator by 3, giving 1/200. That's as simple as it will get.
seduction
if you mean f(mushrooms) then use whatever function on the variable or variable mushrooms. if you mean the function mushrooms, then i have no idea as i would assume there is no standard function mushrooms.
Form follows function means that the shape of a machine or device will be dictated by what it is designed to do. I have no idea where the "most nearly" fits in.
It could be a form of stalking and it should be reported
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One of the elements that collectively form a system of numeration. It is also the number that follows 7.
To achieve a satisfactory level of co-ordination. City functions can be considered as nodes in a directed graph, or as inter-dependent variables of a system (the city that is). It follows that co-ordination is a must, for the system (city) to function as a whole.
No, "narrator" refers to the person telling a story, while "follows" typically means to come after or be next in a sequence.
when someone follows you
It is believed that when smoke follows you it means that some thing evil is lingering around you.
Variation and diversity are synonyms. They mean a marked difference or deviation from the normal or recognized form, function, or structure.
Aesthetic over function is derived from the guiding maxim in design, that of, form or function. Form being the component relating to how something looks in appearance, something may be very beautiful to look at , however utterly useless in use, and vice versa. The optimum of this rule is to achieve a balance between the two with a bias to whichever is of more important in its application, Aesthetic or function
It's the second person singular form of the verb "to have", which conjugates as follows: I have, thou hast, he/she has, we have, you have, they have. This form was old-fashioned even in Shakespeare's day, being replaced by the plural form "you have", but he seems to have liked it, and used it a lot more than his contemporaries.
it likes you da