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40km/hour

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Q: You drive from New Bern to Windsor. If Windsor is 40 km away and it takes you 1 hour to get there what is your speed?
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What is the only capital that has one syllable?

There is several capitals that have one syllable. Here is a few: Bern (Switzerland Prague (Czech Republic) Rome (Italy)


Albert Einsteins kids?

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Albert Einstein lived in... 1879: Ulm, Germany- where he was born 1894: Pavia, Italy 1895: Aarau, Switzerland 1896: Zurich, Switzerland 1901: Shaffhausen, Switzerland 1901: Bern, Switzerland 1911: Prauge, Czech Republic 1912: Berlin, Germany's teach 1933: Princeton, New Jersey/united states-where they died. nathanel e made this and i searched this for proof


Who were albert Einstein's friends?

Some of his friends were Max Talmud and his sister Maja Einstein.Albert Einstein had a couple of close friends as colleagues at the patent office and as students. One of them was Michele Besso from the Zurich home of women. Another was Joseph Saunter from the patent office. He had one more very close friend -- Lucian Chavan, the technical secretary at the Federal Postal and Telegraph Administration in Bern.


What was Albert Einstein's mother's maiden name?

Pauline Koch [February 8, 1858-February 20, 1920]. She was the well-educated, youngest child of Julius Koch and Jette Bernheimer, who were married in 1847. The family name had been Doerzbacher until her father changed his last name, in 1842. Her father and his brother Heinrich did so well in the corn trade that they ultimately shared the prestigious title of Royal Wurttemberg Purveyor to the Court. So he was able to provide very well for the education of his other children [Caesar, Fanny, and Jakob] too.On August 8, 1876, Pauline Koch married Hermann Einstein [August 30, 1847-October 10, 1940] in Cannstatt, Wurttemberg, Germany. After her marriage, she continued her lifelong interest in art, literature, and music. Although she favored the piano, she had her first-born child, Albert Einstein [March 14, 1879-April 18, 1955], begin learning the violin at age five.Due to the ups and downs of her husband's business fortunes, Pauline Einstein was faced with frequent moves. For the couple began their married life in Ulm, the site of her husband's bed feathers company venture. In summer 1880, they moved to Munich, for her husband's electrical engineering venture, ka Einstein & Cie., with his brother Jakob. She moved to Milan in 1894, and then to Pavia in 1895, when the factory was moved to Italy. When the business failed in 1896, she moved back to Milan, where her husband started up his own company. In 1903, she moved back to Germany, for an extended stay with older sister Fanny and brother-in-law and textile manufacturer Rudolf Einstein. In 1911, Pauline Einstein movd out, to accept a position as housekeeper in Heilbronn, Wurttemberg. But some three or four years later, she moved to Zurich, Switzerland, to stay with older brother Jakob and family. During that time, she became ill from cancer, and had to be moved to the Rosenau sanatorium. From the end of 1919, until her death, she lived with son Albert Einstein and daughter-in-law Elsa, at Haberlandstrasse 5, Berlin.It was to her second child, Maria aka Maja [November 18, 1881-June 25, 1951], that Pauline Einstein passed on her love of different cultures, languages and literatures. For Maja Einstein was educated at the teachers' workshop in Aarau, Switzerland, 1899-1902. She then studied Romance languages in Germany, at Berlin and Bern; and at Paris, France. She graduated from the university in Berlin, in 1909, with the title of Ms. Doctor. She left Germany when husband Paul Winteler [1882-July 1952] accepted employment at Lucerne, Switzerland, in 1911; and then at Colonnata, near Florence, Italy, in 1922. In 1939, she emigrated from Italy, to the United States, to keep her brother company after the death of his wife Elsa [January 18, 1876-December 20, 1936], at 112 Mercer Street, Princeton, New Jersey. Maia suffered from a stroke in 1939, and later died from the cumulative effects of progressive arteriosclerosis.