Do you mean ''What does the AUM Mantra mean?''
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.
There is no statistical term such as "deviation mean".
See mean-8. Or get a dictionary.
köttbullar
SWED
afforestation
the tripods expired and the clock stopped |~pato~| 420 SWED
A Sealyham Terrier called AM, CAN & SWED CH EFBE'S HIDALGO AT GOODSPICE, owned by Mesdames M Good and S Middlebrook.
A Norfolk Terrier did not win Crufts in 2009, but one did in 2005, which was called CH & AM CH CRACKNOR CAUSE CELEBRE. In 2009, a Sealyham Terrier won Best in Show called AM, CAN & SWED CH EFBE'S HIDALGO AT GOODSPICE.
The code to unlock ALL games on apple computers push (all at same time) - ctrl, alt, apple and then the eject button a file will open up then, and then you type in what you want to unlock then you can play your games without anything being transferred into your history.
According to SOWPODS (the combination of Scrabble dictionaries used around the world) there are 1 words with the pattern SWED--R. That is, seven letter words with 1st letter S and 2nd letter W and 3rd letter E and 4th letter D and 7th letter R. In alphabetical order, they are: swedger
Rurik (IX century) - Viking, the mythical founder of Novgorod and the royal Rurik dynasty that ruled Russia until the end of the XVI century. Rurik came at the invitation of such tribes as the Chud, Slovenes at Lake Ilmen Krivichy and veаs with his clan, that called Rus, ethnicity is still debated. Russian chronicle claims that he was not and neither Norman nor Swed, neither Britain nor Goth. DNA tests of Y-chromosome representatives of the Rurik dynasty confirms that he may have derived from the Finno-Ugric and Baltic tribes. Russian chronicles say that he came from across the sea, that is, from Scandinavia.
you mean what you mean
Step- Old English. steop-, with connotations of "loss," in combinations like steopcild "orphan," related to astiepan, bestiepan "to bereave, to deprive of parents or children," from P.Gmc. *steupa- "bereft" (cf. O.Fris. stiap-, O.N. stjup-, Swed. styv-, M.L.G. stef-, Du. stief-, O.H.G. stiof-, Ger. stief-), lit. "pushed out," from PIE *steup-, from base *(s)teu- (see steep (adj.)). Etymologically, a stepfather or stepmother is one who becomes father or mother to an orphan, but the notion of orphanage faded in 20c. For sense evolution, cf. L. privignus "stepson," related to privus "deprived."
Mean is the average.