It depends on how you are using the word "half". Most of the time it is used as an adjective. If the word is being used as part of a mixed numeral, then the word is preceded by "and a": "I used three and a half cups of flour in the cake." If the word is being used to denote 50% of a single countable item, then you may use "a half" or "half a(n)", but never "a half a(n)": "We will be there in half an hour." "We will be there in a half hour." It is never correct to use "We will be there in a half an hour." If the word is being used to denote 50% of an uncountable or plural countable item, then the word is followed by "the" or "of the": "Jane used up half the napkins during dinner." "Bob lost half of his marbles in the game." Idiomatically, there exists "half and half", which is approximately 50% cream and 50% milk. This is a noun and is used the same way as the word "milk" with nothing extra needed: "I poured half and half in my coffee."
The word "walking" appears 120 times in the Authorised Version of the Bible.
Shave cream, deodorant, milk, butter... I've already used four and I've only been awake for half an hour.
Just divide the distance by the time. The answer is in meters/second. If you want to convert that to the more commonly used kilometers/hour, multiply the number of meters/second by 3.6.
Some people have used it for many many years. Most still use the 12 hour clock, although for some special applications they might use the 24 h version.
Depends how much you move
A traductor, or translator charges by the amount of time being used. Generally, it is calculated by fractions of an hour, or by half hour. The cost is about $50.00 per half hour used.
When I was 17 a 10 hour walk got me 36km. If heavy walking is something you're used to you won't be stumbling along at the end like I was.
It was made in Philadelphia, the "P" mintmark was not used on a half dollar until 1980.
The Spanish word for half is media (sounds like may-dia). When used in telling the time to just say half hour one could say media hora. The literal translation to a spanish ear would be "half hour". It is more commonly used like this "dos y media" which means 2:30 or two and half. The word "a" (a half) is never used this way.
It depends on how you are using the word "half". Most of the time it is used as an adjective. If the word is being used as part of a mixed numeral, then the word is preceded by "and a": "I used three and a half cups of flour in the cake." If the word is being used to denote 50% of a single countable item, then you may use "a half" or "half a(n)", but never "a half a(n)": "We will be there in half an hour." "We will be there in a half hour." It is never correct to use "We will be there in a half an hour." If the word is being used to denote 50% of an uncountable or plural countable item, then the word is followed by "the" or "of the": "Jane used up half the napkins during dinner." "Bob lost half of his marbles in the game." Idiomatically, there exists "half and half", which is approximately 50% cream and 50% milk. This is a noun and is used the same way as the word "milk" with nothing extra needed: "I poured half and half in my coffee."
There's no coin called a "walking eagle" half dollar. The Walking LIBERTY design was used from 1916 to 1947. If that's what you have, please enter the question "What is the value of a (date) US half dollar?" in the box at the top of the page for a specific answer. (date) is of course the date of your coin.
The walking liberty design was used on half dollars from 1916 to 1947 and wasn't used again until 1986, on 1-oz bullion coins. Please check again and post a new question
There's no such coin. The Walking Liberty design was used on half dollars. Dollars used the Peace design. Please determine which you have and post a new question.
The Walking Liberty design was used only on half dollars in 1927. A denomination is needed, post new question.
The walking liberty design was used on half dollars from 1916 to 1947 and wasn't used again until 1986, on 1-oz bullion coins. If your coin is dated 1902 it shows Miss Liberty's head, not the full portrait of her walking, and the coin is called a Barber half after its designer, Charles Barber. Please see the Related Question for more information
Please check your coin again. The Walking Liberty design was used on HALF dollars during the 1930s, but there were no half dollars or silver dollars minted in 1930 due to the Great Depression.