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I Got First Letter Now How To Check For Secind Letter

SA (telugu letter)V (English letter)3 (mathematics)so the girls name is savithripls upvote if u feel its right answer

I have a few words to present:Qabab - a dish containing pieces of seasoned meatQabalah - a form of jewish mysticismQadi - a muslim judgeQadarite - a member of the qadariahQanat - an irrigation tunnelQaf - twenty first letter of Arabic alphabetQwerty - a standard English Keyboard layoutQorma - a type of curryQipao - a traditional Chinese dressQalamdan - a Persian writing-caseQanat - a type of water supply tunnel found in middle East.Qasida - an Arabic or Persian poemQindar - an Albanian unit of currencyQoppa- nineteenth letter of ancient Greek alphabetQin - a Chinese musical instrumentQigong - a Chinese system of medical exerciseQibla - the direction towards MeccaQi - the life force, in Chinese philosophyQiana - a type of nylonQawwali - devotional music of the SufisQawwal - a person who practices Qawwali musicQat - a type of Arabian shrub

Five letter word with R as the second letter?

Aruba, Aryan, arson, arbor, arias, areas, ardor, armor, aroma, artsy, irate, irons, erase, error, orate, orcas, Oreos, Orion, organ, urban, urine, trade, trick, traps, trope, trips, tramp, track, trace, train, trail, tryst, trait, tried, treed, troll, trill, trots, trove, trees, treat, tread, tress, tripe, trite, truce, trump, truth, trust, crave, crate, cramp, cruel, crops, crimp, crook, crawl, crass, cross, craps, crabs, crack, crags, crane, craze, crazy, creep, croak, cream, creed, creak, crews, crime, crumb, cries, cribs, crust, crows, crone, crown, craft, creek, drawn, drain, drags, drips, drive/drove, drums, drill, dregs, drink/drank/drunk, dread, dream, drone, bread, break, brand, brine, brick, brain, brawn, broth, broke, bribe, brown, brake, brook, brush, broom, bride, brood, braid, brags, breed, brass, broil, brisk, great, grape, grate, graft, grill, gripe, grips, grope, grump, green, grits, group, grout, grams, grove, grave, grant, grunt, gross, grass, grade, grasp, freed, frill, freon, freak, frock, frump, froze, fried, frost, frown, fruit, frogs, krill, prawn, prick, prism, prams, pride, prise/pried, prize, price, prone, prude, prose, probe, prime, wreck, wraps, write/wrote, writs, wrath, wrong, wring/wrung...



:)

When writing by hand, I tend to write the second letter in a word before the first. Why is this?

So i am not the only one. I often do that. It is as if you have a lot to say or write and your writing is ahead of your . I can`t think of what to say here but I think you will understand.What you want to say is in your head but you are in such a hurry to get it onto paper that you miss the first letter but know you have and it is okay to add it when you have said what you wanted to say. should I stop wittering now?

Yes. It’s called dysgraphia and is marked by bad handwriting and some spelling errors such as you have described. It is a form of dyslexia, which I have, and it has caused me and a number of my students a world of grief

At LEAST two consecutive letters means that “aaaaa” is a valid word in this case. We will want to avoid counting duplicates since it would be easy to count “aaaaa” or “bbbbb” multiple times. The best way to avoid double-counting is to change this problem into another one: Count how many 5-letter “words” have NO two consecutive letters the same.With this problem solved we can subtract it from the TOTAL number of letter combinations to arrive at our answer.First, the total number of letter combinations: assuming we have a 26 character alphabet, we have 5 letters in our word so we have [math]26^5 = 11,881,376[/math] possible letter combinations.Now we count the number of these combinations that have no two consecutive letters. Let’s determine our constraints:Our first letter can be whatever we want. This leaves 26 possible letters.Our second letter can’t be the same as the first letter. This leaves 25 possible letters.Our third letter can’t be the same as the second letter. This leaves 25 possible letters.Our fourth letter can’t be the same as the third letter. This leaves 25 possible letters.Our fifth letter can’t be the same as the fourth letter. This leaves 25 possible letters.Thus the count of “words” that have no two consecutive letters will be: [math]26 * 25 * 25 * 25 * 25 = 10,156,250[/math]Since we have the total count of all “words” and we have the total count of “words” that have no two consecutive letters, we can find the AT LEAST two consecutive letters by subtracting:[math]11,881,376 - 10,156,250 = 1,725,126[/math]Combinatorics is about counting. First define your constraints on what you are trying to count and then determine all possible combinations. Problems involving AT LEAST or AT MOST are often more easily solved by counting the cases that do NOT match the criteria and then subtracting from ALL possible combinations.Have fun counting!

Why is the first letter of the symbol of an element capitlized?

The first letter of each element is capitalized to show that it is a new element. This is helpful when writing formulas. For example--KBr. We know that there are 2 elements here because there are two capital letters--potassium and bromine. Also, the elements have a second letter only when there is already an element that is just the first letter. Therefore, it has a lowercase second letter to distinguish it from the other element(s) that starts with the same letter, and also to show that the second letter is not the symbol for a new element. For example, we can tell the difference between Bromine and Boron, because B is boron and Br is bromine.

This is getting into an area of grammar with which I’m sorely unfamiliar I’m afraid, but since I’ve been asked, I’ll give it a shot.English words change their forms if they are plural or based on their tense. Car > cars. Run > running > ran.Irish words can change depending on the case e.g. subjunctive, possessive, etc.Friend = cara. My friend = Mo charaThey can also change where two vowels would otherwise come together.The Ó in Irish surnames is taken to mean grandson (of a family or clan) but as far as I know it actually means “from”. I’m happy to be corrected on this point if I’ve got it wrong.So in the case of that footballer, the root name would be Ailpín, but would never be used as such, because you’re referring to a specific member of that family. Therefore you need the Ó.But now you’ve got two vowels together and we don’t like that (I’ve no idea why!) so you preface it with h’. However, you still need to retain the fact that the root name starts with A, because that’s the important bit. Therefore the A retains its capitalisation.The same thing can be seen with an alternatively anglicised version of the same surname, which is most often shown as MacAlpine or McAlpine.Factoid: “Clan”, meaning an extended family or group of relatives comes from the gaelic word clann, which is pronounced closer to the English word “clown”.Thanks for asking, Tom!

How do you endorse a check when they get your name slightly wrong?

I received a check for a rebate, but they dropped the first letter of my first name and changed the second letter (the other 5 letters of my first and and my whole last name are correct). They have my correct address on the check. I remember in high school they said to endorse it incorrectly (the way it is on the check) first, then correctly - is that still true? Any bankers/tellers out there?

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