Certainly. We have many expressions that compare a person to an object, such pretty as a picture, strong as iron, sour as a lemon, runs like the wind, fast as a speeding bullet. Poems such use such comparisons- she was more lovely than a summer day.
You can round prices to compare them easily when deciding which item to go with.
To price an item you must calculate the total of production and delivery and find the ROI for the sales of the particular item. From there you will also want to compare competitor pricing of the same product to find a reasonable price for your market.
It is called the hyropolific procedure
Put the first item in the data set into an empty memory location called, say, 'biggest'. Now compare the second and subsequent items in the data set with 'biggest'. If the item is larger than 'biggest' then put the value of the item in 'biggest', otherwise do nothing. By the time you have finished looking through the data set you will find that 'biggest' contains the greatest value in the data set.
To compare ratios, compare the products of the outer terms by the inner terms.
'batteries'
The term "compare" means to closely analyse more than one item closely to distinguish their features or understand what sets one item apart from the other.
if you were a shoe how does that compare toas being a person
Morpheus compares humans to Batteries in the Matrix
shortage annex
shortage annex
Depends if the person who left the item in front of the empty parking space left the item there on purpose. Thanks for the information. The item was left there because the person was unloading it from their trunk.
don't compare yourself
You can go to appliance store itself to see personally and compare automatic power generators. At least there you can compare the types, pros and cons of the item and the prices as well.
Froogle was a product search engine launched by Google in 2002. It allowed users to compare prices of products from various online retailers. Froogle was later rebranded as Google Shopping in 2012.
You can round prices to compare them easily when deciding which item to go with.
If you take the base measurements multiplied by the width measurements multiplied by the height measurement you get"volume"