The number 1 on the U.S. charts on the 19th January 2007 was Beyonce's 'Irreplaceable'. The number 1 on the U.K. charts on the 19th January 2007 was Leona Lewis's 'A Moment Like This'.
Each second is (1 and 2/3) hundredths of a minute. If you have some number of seconds to convert, you have a choice: Option #1: Long division. Divide the (number of seconds) by (60). Multiply the quotient by (100). The answer is the number of (hundredths of a minute). Option #2: Take the number of seconds. Multiply it by (5/3). The answer is the number of (hundredths of a minute).
'F' (feet / minute) x (1 minute / 60 seconds) = (F / 60) (feet - minute / minute - second) = F/60 ft/sec -- Take the number of feet per minute. -- Divide it by 60. -- The answer is the number of feet per second.
"You Better You Bet" reached number one in the U.S. Rock Chart, "Who's next" reached number one in the U.K. Album Chart, but they had no number ones in the normal singles charts.
The number '9' represents 100ths of a second.
number 1. the soundtrack for mamma mia was number 1 on the American charts
The number 1 on the U.S. charts on the 19th January 2007 was Beyonce's 'Irreplaceable'. The number 1 on the U.K. charts on the 19th January 2007 was Leona Lewis's 'A Moment Like This'.
On the singles charts, yes. But there are other, separate charts for albums.
Number 1! >.<
Most 60-minute stock charts on the Web are for 10 days max.
Change the question to say which charts!
Take That- Progress has been number 1 in the charts for about 5 weeks.
None on the pop charts She had many number ones on the country charts
nope
unk
The Jimmie Rodgers tune that was number one on the charts the week Sputnik 1 was launched was "Honeycomb." It became a popular hit and topped the charts in 1957.
The Supremes 'Baby love' was in the charts from late October to late November 1964.