Answer: 44 meters
176.4 meters
240 ft
The ball was thrown horizontally at 10 meters per sec, and the thrower's arm was 78.4 meters above the base of the cliff.
64 metersIf a ball is thrown horizontally at 20 m/s from the top of a cliff that is 50 meters high, the ball will strike the ground 64 m from the base of the cliff (20m/s x 3.2 s).
A real life example of a cliff are the white cliffs of Dover.
A "cliff".
A "cliff".
A cliff is a high, steep rock face that extends vertically or nearly vertically. It is often found along coastlines or in mountainous regions. An example of a famous cliff is the Cliffs of Moher in Ireland.
Paraphrasing is simply explaining the same thing using different words. For example, 'He jumped the cliff whilst pulling a cracker' can be paraphrased as 'While jumping the cliff, he pulled a cracker.'
The schoolbus balanced precariously on the edge of the cliff.
A rock falling of a cliff.
One example is a backpack on your back.
When there is a series on tv and it says "to be continued" at the best part.
heat, movement, radiation, object sitting on a cliff
Cliff regrading is restructuring the face of a cliff to make the gradient less steep. This is an example off soft engineering, although it is hard to find accurate information about it on the internet. A good place to find more information is GCSE Geography.
The answer is, it can be either one. What distinguishes a cliff from (for example) a mountain is the angle of the slope: in other words, how quickly the land drops off. Since cliffs generally follow the coastline where they're formed, the edge of the cliff can be either straight or curved; and the face of the cliff can be flat, jagged, or even rounded under.