To find out 77 percent of something, just multiply that something to 0.77.
I'm not sure what book is quoted the most but the most quoted verse is John 3:16. Psalms would also be a top contender.
You divide the first something by the second something. You can, if you like, simplify the resulting fraction.
Multiply the something by 3/8
You cannot find the diameter of something from its circumference unless it is a circle and, in that case, diameter = circumference/pi
Quotation marks (" ") are used to indicate that something is being quoted. Additionally, a blockquote format in HTML can be used to visually indicate a quoted section of text.
Your title comes from what you have written. Finish your editorial first and you'll find an interesting title from something you wrote or something someone said that you quoted in the editorial.
Alex Haley
Mary Manin Morrissey
In a book
Katherine Whitehorn
Who quoted what? and what are you expecting are answer to be!
It is not quite clear what you mean ... If you are thinking of the kind of situation where one source is quoted by another, use something along these lines: Weinstein (1955), as quoted by Smithaars (2007: 141).
The answer will depend on what units the rental rate is quoted in.
His last words of, "It's all right. It's all right. I only want Heaven.", have been quoted in biographies about him. I was not able to find anything else.
it is that something you find or find something that is special
The Blythes Are Quoted was created in 2009.