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Bhagyashree Mourya 3 years, 3 months ago

Cell is the fundamental unit of life. It is made up of tissue.
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Palak Evne 2 years ago

cell is the unit of life
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Raj Na 3 years, 3 months ago

Hahha
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Pallavi Ag 3 years, 4 months ago

Nowadays computers are being used in more and more places. In Computer Science, learn how you can convert your real-world into a virtual world
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Imtiaz Ahmed 3 years, 4 months ago

Answer
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Aditi Mishra 3 years, 5 months ago

It may vary from person to person
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Nayansi Ranjan 3 years, 3 months ago

Ofcourse!
  • 2 answers

Satyam Dhawan 3 years, 5 months ago

1degree =60minuts 1minuts=60seconds So 18360/60×60 18360/3600 1836/360 612/120 204/60 68/20 34/10 17/5 radians

Satyam Dhawan 3 years, 5 months ago

1degree =60minuts 1minuts=60seconds
Yo
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Gitisha Agarwal 3 years, 5 months ago

1st when khushwant singh lived with his grandmother in the village without his parents they had gone to live in the city. 2nd when both shifted to the city and shared the same room. 3rd when the writer joined the university and was given a room of his own
(a) On the basis of your reading of the passage, make notes on it in points only, using abbreviations, wherever necessary. Also suggest a suitable title. (b) Write a summary of the passage in not more than 80 words, using the notes you have made. The first crisis the lunar explorers faced came just short of moon fall. The Apollo 11 Lunar Module, code – named ‘eagle’, was still 9.5 km (6 miles) up when the vital guidance computer began flashing an alarm. It was overloading. Any second it could give up the ghost under the mounting pressure and nothing the two astronauts could do would save the mission. Emergencies were nothing new to Commander Neil Armstrong but he and his co – pilot Buzz Aldrin hadn’t even practiced for this one on the ground – no one believed it could happen. Sweeping feet first towards their target, they pressed ahead as controllers on Earth waited heart – in – mouth. Racing against the computer, Eagle slowed and then pitched upright to stand on its rocket plume and gave Armstrong his first view of the landing site. The wrong one! They had overshot by four miles into unfamiliar territory and were heading straight for a football field size crater filled with boulders “the size of Volkswagens”. With his fuel running out, and only a minute’s flying time left, Armstrong coolly accelerated the hovering Eagle beyond the crater, touching 88 km/h (55mph). Controllers were puzzled and alarmed by the unplanned manoeuvres. Mission Director George Hale pleaded silently: “Get it down, Neil. Get it down.” The seconds ticked away. “Forward, drifting right,” Aldrin said. And then, with less than 20 seconds left, came the magic word: “Contact!” Armstrong spoke first: “Tranquillity base here, the Eagle has landed.” His words were heard by 600 million people – a fifth of humanity. About six and a half hours later, Eagle’s front door was opened and Armstrong backed out onto a small porch. He wore a €200,000 moon suit, a sort of thermos flask capable of stopping micrometeoroids travelling 30 times faster than a rifle bullet. He carried a backpack which weighed 49 kg and enough oxygen for a few hours. Heading down the ladder, Armstrong unveiled a €200,000 TV camera so the world could witness his first step: “That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.” It was 3.56 am, 21 July, 1969.
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The first crisis the lunar explorers faced came just short of moon fall. The Apollo 11 Lunar Module, code – named ‘eagle’, was still 9.5 km (6 miles) up when the vital guidance computer began flashing an alarm. It was overloading. Any second it could give up the ghost under the mounting pressure and nothing the two astronauts could do would save the mission. Emergencies were nothing new to Commander Neil Armstrong but he and his co – pilot Buzz Aldrin hadn’t even practiced for this one on the ground – no one believed it could happen. Sweeping feet first towards their target, they pressed ahead as controllers on Earth waited heart – in – mouth. Racing against the computer, Eagle slowed and then pitched upright to stand on its rocket plume and gave Armstrong his first view of the landing site. The wrong one! They had overshot by four miles into unfamiliar territory and were heading straight for a football field size crater filled with boulders “the size of Volkswagens”. With his fuel running out, and only a minute’s flying time left, Armstrong coolly accelerated the hovering Eagle beyond the crater, touching 88 km/h (55mph). Controllers were puzzled and alarmed by the unplanned manoeuvres. Mission Director George Hale pleaded silently: “Get it down, Neil. Get it down.” The seconds ticked away. “Forward, drifting right,” Aldrin said. And then, with less than 20 seconds left, came the magic word: “Contact!” Armstrong spoke first: “Tranquillity base here, the Eagle has landed.” His words were heard by 600 million people – a fifth of humanity. About six and a half hours later, Eagle’s front door was opened and Armstrong backed out onto a small porch. He wore a €200,000 moon suit, a sort of thermos flask capable of stopping micrometeoroids travelling 30 times faster than a rifle bullet. He carried a backpack which weighed 49 kg and enough oxygen for a few hours. Heading down the ladder, Armstrong unveiled a €200,000 TV camera so the world could witness his first step: “That’s one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind.” It was 3.56 am, 21 July, 1969.
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Gitisha Agarwal 3 years, 5 months ago

The portrait of a lady is a beautiful heart warming story of a loving relationship between the writer and his grandmother. Which has a description of their attachment to each other which withstood all the changes in time and values
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