true
hai
Both. It depends on how its used It can be either. If you are talking about the action... as in "I am going to exit the room," then it is a verb. If you are talking about a thing... as in, please proceed through the exit of the theatre," then it is a noun.
No, it is not an adverb.The word exit is a verb, or noun, and can be used as an adjunct or adjective (exit door, exit plan).
Leave, depart, exit, move.
escape, exit, flee, leave
alight, leave, depart, get off, evacuate
False. Variables declared within a particular member function are local to that function, and are automatically allocated and deallocated at entry and exit of the function.
False
The predefined functions, that are already written for you. Some of them are strlen, printf, fgets, exit.
It controls the entry and exit of substances.
You will fly to the nearest flight master. When you exit you will be in the exact same place.
False.
This is not an exact analogy, although entrance can be considered the opposite of exit. The "opposite" of minute (small) would be large, big, or huge.
false
false
No; false it lets whoever is using the emergency exit to gain entrance into the building get to your room first.
Verb: I needed to EXIT the building to get to my car. Exit means the same thing as leave in this way. Noun: The EXIT is this way, my friend. Exit in this sentence is a place to leave from, like a back door.
resistance in the circuit