a Full stop, or a Period... you know, the little dots? ........
The word gap means a big space with no #s on a line plot.
This word is were you add up all the numbers on a line plot and then divide the number by the number of number they're.
The line was one centimeter long on mcas
The two dots above a letter, you mean, would be called a diaeresis and/or an umlaut.
A common and good sentence using the word plot is; "The characters within your story often carry the plot." There are also other ways to use the word plot. Such as, "Any story has a particular plot and structure in which all characters play their part."
U can make a sentence using plot like this "i made a plotline"
a Full stop, or a Period... you know, the little dots? ........
dashes, cammoas, apostrophes, brackets and dots.
The word dots is a noun or a verb. Dots as a Verb: Sammy dots his paper with a paint brush. Dot as a noun: Sammy connected the dots to make a picture.
the Spanish word for crankshaft is 'cigunal' and the u has 2 dots over it and the n has a squiggly line on top
This is the sequence of triangular numbers. You draw one dot. Then you draw two dots in the line below - one to the left and one to the right of the first dot. You now have a triangle, of three dots. Then you draw three dots in the next line and you get a triangle with 6 dots. Next, four more dots in the next line giving a triangle with 10 dots. The name is easy to understand if you can visualise or even actually draw these dots. It is difficult to demonstrate through an ordinary word processing package.
The word gap means a big space with no #s on a line plot.
It is actually spelled mötet, using an o with two dots on it. It means the encounter.
In Microsoft Word, a leader refers to what you will often see in a table of contents where the name of a chapter or section is linked to a page number by a line or a series of dots or hyphens across the page: Chapter 1.....................................Page 5 The line, dots, hyphens etc. are all known as leaders. You can choose what leaders you want.
This word is were you add up all the numbers on a line plot and then divide the number by the number of number they're.
For her book report, Sara Jane had to summarize the plot of The Catcher in the Rye.