The population in Lethbridge has increased 12% in the past five years, making it close to 100,000 people living there. The 500 seat auditorium has been outgrown.
It is: 15 minutes past the hour
11:59:59.9 PM, December 31, 2009.=================================I don't agree.The first year was the year ' 1 ', not ' 0 '. That's why the end of the first Century (100 years)was the end of the year ' 100 ', and the end of the 20th Century was the end of ' 2000 '.By definition, a decade is 10 years. The first decade consisted of the years [ 1 - 10 ], and endedat the end of the year ' 10 '. Add 10 years to that for every subsequent decade, and eventuallyyou wind up in our current era. The ends of decades occur at 11:59:59.9 PM on December 31stof 1990, 2000, and 2010.If you accept the reasoning concerning the Century but not concerning the decade, then youwind up in an awkward position, with the year 2000 being in the old Century but the new decade.Wikipedia resolves this problem by only having "9" years in the first "decade".The new decade does not start until Jan. 1, 2011 , one second past midnight on Dec 31st, 2010.When you refer to the "60's" you are refering to the years 1960 to 1969, ten years... just not the same as the decade of the 60's.
none
The answer depends on what you intended by "half past 122".
All of them.
The past participle of "crash" is "crashed."
The past simple of "crash" is "crashed."
The past participle for "crash" is "crashed."
The past tense of crash is crashed.
Titanic had stops in England, France, and Ireland.
Which of the following industries spearheaded the economic development of Bengaluru over the past decade?
No, the word crashed is the past participle, past tense of the verb to crash and an adjective.The word crash is the verb and a noun. Example sentences:Verb: He crashed his car into the mailbox.Adjective: They towed away his crashed car.Verb: I heard him crash into something.Noun: The crash brought all the neighbors out to see what happened.
The word decade is a noun, not a verb, and so doesn't have any tenses.
the cell phones
sa
According to Forbes, college rates have been raising at around 7% per year for the past several decades. This equals out to be about a 76% raise in tuition costs over the past decade.