1,111,111 TRP = 11,111 USD
1,111,111 TRP = 11,111 USD
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List of democratic countries
According to Ranker, this is what i get just as I've listed below in orderly manner. Bhutan Central Tibetan Administration Dominican Republic Germany India Kingdom of the Netherlands Malawi Mexico Pakistan Poland Puerto Rico Republic of Ireland South Africa Sudan Uganda United States of America YouUnfold thinking...
According to Ranker, this is what i get just as I’ve listed below in orderly manner.
Bhutan
Central Tibetan Administration
Dominican Republic
Germany
India
Kingdom of the Netherlands
Malawi
Mexico
Pakistan
Poland
Puerto Rico
Republic of Ireland
South Africa
Sudan
Uganda
United States of America
You can also read complete article of this from here https://www.ranker.com/list/countries-ruled-by-democracy/reference
See lessTyphoon philippines today
I also saw this on the news. Rappler has recently published a typhoon update saying; Tisoy weakens into severe tropical storm. You can read the full article here https://www.rappler.com/nation/special-coverage/weather-alert/246373-severe-tropical-storm-tisoy-pagasa-forecast-december-4-2019-5am
I also saw this on the news. Rappler has recently published a typhoon update saying; Tisoy weakens into severe tropical storm.
You can read the full article here https://www.rappler.com/nation/special-coverage/weather-alert/246373-severe-tropical-storm-tisoy-pagasa-forecast-december-4-2019-5am
See lessTyphoon philippines today
Apostle here is part of the video i found on youtube. I heard it was devastating is other part of the countries.
Apostle here is part of the video i found on youtube. I heard it was devastating is other part of the countries.
See lessShould I start with Django or JavaScript?
As per my personal opinion, I started with HTML, bit bit i started trying to trace CSS, then i walked my way through PHP, continued in JavaScript, then moved in Django. So, to me I will say it just depend on your personal self which one you feel more comfortable with and that's fine.
As per my personal opinion, I started with HTML, bit bit i started trying to trace CSS, then i walked my way through PHP, continued in JavaScript, then moved in Django.
So, to me I will say it just depend on your personal self which one you feel more comfortable with and that’s fine.
See lessHow did the world came into existence
I love watching this video documentary! I always come back to watch it if I feel lost or need to put things into perspective :) He must have spent a hell of time to put all these together.
I love watching this video documentary! I always come back to watch it if I feel lost or need to put things into perspective đ He must have spent a hell of time to put all these together.
See lessIs PHP still a relevant language in 2017?
My humble opinion is yes, PHP is still very much a relevant language in 2017 and till this date which am writing this answer to respond your question. So if you're looking forward to build a beautiful and sweet looking website, then I will humbly advise you go with PHP. Thank you. :)
My humble opinion is yes, PHP is still very much a relevant language in 2017 and till this date which am writing this answer to respond your question.
So if you’re looking forward to build a beautiful and sweet looking website, then I will humbly advise you go with PHP. Thank you. đ
See lessWhy are the British confused about us calling bread rolls âbiscuitsâ when they call bread rolls âpuddingsâ?
They might be as confused as to why you keep calling pudding âbiscuitsâ. Step out of your own cultural context for a minute. You do not own English, and there is no reason that the way it is used elsewhere should be understandable to you, or vice versa. If anyone had rights to the language, for thatUnfold thinking...
They might be as confused as to why you keep calling pudding âbiscuitsâ.
Step out of your own cultural context for a minute. You do not own English, and there is no reason that the way it is used elsewhere should be understandable to you, or vice versa. If anyone had rights to the language, for that matter, it sort of makes sense that it would be English people, right?
But that doesnât really matter. English is the first language of millions of people around the globe, and the second language of maybe billions. Not only each disparate group out there using it, but actually each person within each group uses it differently. This is the nature of languageâit is dynamic. It grows, evolves, regionalizes, incorporates words from other languages, and changes to meet unique cultural context.
It is not the role of English people to account to you for their use and understanding of their own language.
See lessWhy are the British confused about us calling bread rolls âbiscuitsâ when they call bread rolls âpuddingsâ?
We arenât, and we donât. You are misinformed. In Britain, the word âbiscuitâ means a hard baked cookie, like a graham cracker. Since this is the normal use of this word in the UK, we donât automatically think of the plain scone-type baked goods for which Americans use the word âbiscuitâ. US EnglishUnfold thinking...
We arenât, and we donât. You are misinformed.
In Britain, the word âbiscuitâ means a hard baked cookie, like a graham cracker. Since this is the normal use of this word in the UK, we donât automatically think of the plain scone-type baked goods for which Americans use the word âbiscuitâ. US English is a different dialect of English, and there are many words which have different meanings from U.K. English (jumper, braces, suspenders, tap etc.)
What on earth makes you think we call bread rolls âpuddingsâ? In the U.K., pudding is any dessert, not just the blancmange-stuff which Americans use that word for. It is correct in the U.K. to say âIâm having apple pie for pudding.â.
See lessIs this statement, âi see him last nightâ can be understood as âI saw him last nightâ?
No, âI see him last nightâ is always incorrect and will be only just barely understandable. It is a very serious and basic error, and it will be tiring for a native speaker to converse with someone who speaks like this, because they will constantly have to be remembering what the person really meansUnfold thinking...
No, âI see him last nightâ is always incorrect and will be only just barely understandable. It is a very serious and basic error, and it will be tiring for a native speaker to converse with someone who speaks like this, because they will constantly have to be remembering what the person really means. It will not be âimmediately obvious without thinking about itâ.
Someone just asked this question recently, and I replied, saying that âI see him last nightâ is never correct. That is exactly what i meant.
See lessGoogle Analytics reads like a seismic chart lately
My clients have seen big changes the last couple of weeks, but all for the good thankfully. The âFredâ update was a biggie and it looks like some websites that have massive ads with little quality content got hit hard. I saw one post where their traffic plummeted 95% and they are virtually invisibleUnfold thinking...
My clients have seen big changes the last couple of weeks, but all for the good thankfully. The âFredâ update was a biggie and it looks like some websites that have massive ads with little quality content got hit hard. I saw one post where their traffic plummeted 95% and they are virtually invisible in search nowâŚâŚit is times like these I am thrilled I only do white-hat workâŚ.sometimes I scratch my head and am tempted when I see competitors outrank me with crappy sites with no backlinksâŚbut I have hope their day will come! đ
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