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The denominator is the number on the bottom.
number that comes front
Pretty sure it has do with the number of times it has been recycled.
You are just multiPlying the top two number then the bottom two numbers
Dinnerware refers specifically to the plates, bowls, teacups, and serving dishes. Basically anything made from clay. Some people also include flatware, stemware/drink-ware, and table linens as subcategories of dinnerware. Flatware refers to the utensils used at the table: forks, knives spoons, serving utensils. Stemware refers to any drinking glasses that have stems such as wine glasses and champagne flutes. Drink-ware refers to any thing you use to drink out of: wine glasses, high ball glasses, pilsner glasses, water goblets, etc.
No, glasses is not just a noun. Glasses, not matter how you mean it, is a plural noun. If you mean glasses as in drinking glasses then there is more than one. Making it a plural noun. If you are talking about reading glasses, then there are two lenses. Making it also a plural noun.
¿Están listos/as tus lentes/gafas? (If you mean 'spectacles')Estan listos tus vasos? (If you mean drinking-glasses)
une paire de lunettes (a pair of glasses) - les verres (for drinking out of) (NB un verre can also mean the individual lense in a pair of glasses)
Boite de lunette. That is assuming you mean spectacles--glasses for seeing--it is lunette. "Lunette" is singular, like a PAIR of glasses, so English "Where ARE my glasses?" (plural verb) would be "Ou EST ma lunette?" If you mean drinking glasses, they are verres.
Occhiale if one means eye glasses. They have a different word for shades or dark glasses. I assume you mean spectacles- not drinking vessels. There is probably a word like ( Spectacles) also to mean eye glasses. Note the resemblance of Occhiale to loosely the word Goggles- which might be a derivation!
do you mean glasses to wear or glasses to drink from? With glasses to wear, the lens falls out. they use a special kind of glue and some wire to stick it back into place, and then screw it in. With drinking glasses, they are VERY hard to repair, but I guess glue and a lot of time and patience would do the trick
the bottom number of a fraction (:
The answer depends on what kinds of glasses: spectacles or ones for drinking from. Second, the answer depends on which aspect you wish to measure: mass, volume, height, refractive index, and so on.
This is an old adage and it means Drink up, refering to tipping the drinking vessel so that the base or bottom can be seen.
I take it you mean on your blood pressure readings? The bottom number is the pressure the blood is returning to the heart.
The denominator is the number on the bottom.
In a fraction, the numerator is the number on the top and a denominator is the number on the bottom.