There is no greatest whole number. If x were the greatest whole number then what about x+1? It would be greater than x and it would be a whole number!
You would need to round it to the nearest whole number.
It can be an adverb when it modifies an adjective to mean very, or especially. Examples would be "such terrible weather" or "such sad memories."
It would round to 16 as a whole number.
1 whole = 100%
One generation memories are only one lifes memories the ones he is receiving are the whole worlds memories. Hope this helped this is my first one i answered.
For an individual country, that would depend on the country. For the whole world - probably 0%. There is always someone fighting somewhere - whether country-versus-country, or civil war.
Yes, but only as an "end rhyme", meaning the last part of the words rhyme, not the whole words.
In the case of the United States, the word nation would refer to the whole country. And the word state would refer to one of the individual states which comprise the entire country. However, in most other examples, the two words can mean the same thing.
They would be memories of the holiday of Hanukkah.
the country as a whole
The community made the exception to the rules because they realized that keeping memories alive through one individual could benefit the society as a whole. By preserving the memories with one person, they could learn from the past and make better decisions for the future without the burden of pain and suffering.
because if there are good memories you would want to keep them
Hey would be able to destroy the whole country
Their economy was based on the Pharaoh. It is that way because the Pharaoh would have to run the whole country. Without the Pharaoh the whole country would fall apart.
That would be a dictator.
There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.There is no town in Northern Ireland that you could say hates the English. Individual people may, and in some towns there would be lots of them, but you could not say it of a whole town.