When I run 10 miles in 10 minutes, I use extrapolation to see how long it takes to run 30 miles. =_=
66 miles per hour
I'm guessing that you left out the first sentence, where it says something like:"Sam and Freidel are driving their new sports car down themiddle of the highway at a speed of 'S' miles per hour." Then the expression you've demanded is ( S t/60 ) .
116
(7 / 4.5) * 225 = 350 miles in 7 hours.
No.
The nouns in the sentence are: hunt, food, bears, miles, and land.
A literal sentence is a sentence that uses an actual example of what you are talking about. For example, he drove down the street at 50 miles per hour is a literal sentence.
A group of lions is a pride. The cry is a deep throated roar that can be heard many miles away.
The Amazon River stretched for miles.
The expanse of the desert stretched for miles.
The sprawling metropolis stretched for miles.
The pronoun in the sentence is their, a possessive adjective, a word placed before a noun to describe that noun as belonging to people or things.In the case of the example sentence, the pronoun 'their' takes the place of a plural noun, or two or more nouns for a previously mentioned group of people or the people of a given place.
The common nouns in the sentence are:travelerspeedmileshourNote: The word 'twenty' is functioning as an adjective describing the noun 'miles'.
First Miles was created on 1945-04-24.
The word mile is a length. Sentence- I am about to drive 403 miles to Glasgow.
You have jogged ten miles already and you havethree more to go.There are two verbs / phrases in this sentence: have jogged and haveHave jogged is present perfecthave is present simple