Well 8 and one half inch equals 8.5 inches.
3 4th of an inch equals .75 inch.
So 8.5 inches minus .75 inch equals 7.75 inches
7.75 inches minus another .75 inch equals 7 inches
11 inches minus .75 inch equals 10.25 inches
10.25 inches minus another .75 inch equals 9.5 inches
So then the dimensions would be 7 inches by 9.5 inchesor
7 inches by 9 and one half inches.
If Karina has an 8 1/2 inch by 11 inch sheet of paper and she wants to leave a 3/4 inch margin on all 4 sides, the dimensions of the remaining area would be 7 inches by 9 1/2 inches.
What is left for the body of the paper is 6 1/2 by 9 1/2 inches.
Draw a picture. Since you are taking the margin off all four sides, you are removing it from both the height and length twice, so take 1.5 inches from both dimensions. The answer is 7 x 9.5 inches
gutter margin
The opposite of remaining is going, or gone.
There is no record of any remaining.
When sewing, you'll want to leave a sewing margin (or a "seam allowance") for a couple of reasons:A 5/8" margin (the standard seam allowance) between the stitch and the edge allows for a little reinforcement, and places less stress on the stitch. This will keep the stitch from breaking easily.A margin allows you to later let out the seam, in case you need more room (for example, if a skirt gets too tight, you can loosen it if there's seam allowance).
leave large ordanance fragemnts containing explosives and may leave chunks or pieces of exposed explosives; do not remove remaining debris
Book, so you can leave extra room for binding
leave large ordnance fragments containing explosives and may leave chuncks or pieces of exposed explosives; do not move remaining debris
Leave large ordnance fragments containing explosives and may leave chunks or pieces of exposed explosive; do not move remaining debris.
leaf blade ,dorsal and ventral view,stalk, leaf margin and its venation(parallel/branched).