Question #1:Needed help finding perimeter and volume?1. A sqaure poster has sides measuring two feet less than the sides of a sqaure sign. If the difference between thier area's is twenty sqaure feet, find the lengths of the sides of the poster and the sign.2. The product of two consecutive positive integers is 1 more than thier sum. Find the integers. 3. The length of one leg of a right triangle is 4 feet. The lengt of the hypotenuse is two feet longer than the other leg. Find the length of the hypotenuse on the other leg. 4. Rosa works due north of her home. Her husband allen works due east. They leave for work at the same time. By the time rosa is 3 miles from her home, the distance between them is one mile more than Alan distance from home. How far from home is alan. 5. A ladder is leabing against a building. The distance from the bottom of the ladder to the building is 20 feet shorter than the length of the ladder. How high up the side of the building is the top of the ladder if that distance is 10 ft less than the length of the ladder? 6. If an object is propelled upward from a height of s feet at an initial velocity of v feet per second, then its hieght h after t seconds is given by the equation h+-16t^2+vt+s, where h is in feet. If the object is propelled from the height of 8 feet with an initial velocity of 96 feet per second, its height h is given by the equation h+-16t^2+96t+8 after how many seconds is the height 116 feet? The time is ___________seconds Question #2:Is this D'Gray Man OC a Mary Sue?Name: Jayden RameyAge: 17-18 Birth date: August 23 Appearance: Click Here Nationality: French on her fathers side, and Irish on her mothers. Innocence: Jayden's innocence is two black wakizashis that are the length from her finger tip to her elbow that are chained together that is named Yaibadansu "dancing blades". Yaibadansu has many levels, or forms that she can release by saying reveru kaihou "level release" as well as whichever release she is planning on using which gos up to six. In whichever level she is using Yaibadansu can fling blades of wind at her opponent. These blades of wind only get stronger with the level shes using. In the last level she can use an attack by piercing the ground in an upward motion. In turn this creates a huge blast from the ground. Biography: Jayden grew up in Rennes, a town on the coast of France, where she lived with her parents and older brother. When she was six her father got ill and died so she doesn't remember much about him. The rest of her life was pretty good from then on. Though everything went downhill soon after she turned thirteen when her mother and brother were murdered when she was thirteen. She stayed in her hometown even after their murder and soon after she met Aindrea Carloway, who came from Ireland on a ship after her mother passed away. They quickly became good friends and soon they had decided to leave France to travel for awhile. This is where they met up with Kanda, Lavi, and Allen when an akuma attacked the train they were boarding. They also found out they had an innocence so they traveled with them to the black order. Other: She wears this locket that belonged to her mother, Click Here Well that's it I think. I do have one question how do you acquire an equipment type innocence. Does it just appear once your innocence awakens or what? Oh yeah, one more thing. I do have pictures of the forms of Yaibadansu if you want to see them. I redid my whole OC Question #3:Proof that Cornrows are an African Hairstyle and not just a hairstyle that black america wears.?People get mad at me when I say that Cornrows are a Black African Hairstyle. I don't know why they get mad. It's like they don't believe me. I hate cornrows on Asians and Whites. I think it looks funny and there hair is too straight for it.Cornrows are a traditional style of hair grooming of African origin where the hair is tightly braided very close to the scalp, using an underhand, upward motion to produce a continuous, raised row. Cornrows can be formed, as the name implies, in simple, straight lines; or, in complicated geometric or curvilinear designs. Often favored for their easy maintenance, cornrows can be left in for weeks at a time simply by carefully washing the hair using a stocking cap or hair net and then regularly oiling the scalp and hair. Cornrowed hairstyles are often adorned with beads or cowry shells, in the African tradition. Depending on the region of the world, cornrows can be worn by either men or women. A common way of styling hair in populations from sub-Saharan Africa, cornrows survived for centuries in the United States and other parts of the New World as a style of hair preparation among African slaves and their progeny. In 1963, when most African American women were loath to be seen in public with unstraightened hair, actress Cicely Tyson drew immediate notice when she sported cornrows on the popular network television series East Side/West Side. The style gained wide popularity in the United States in the late 1960s and 1970s as part of the Black is beautiful movement, when the trend was to reject straightening one's hair in favor of "natural" hairstyles. Afros, strands of hair twisted into tight coils or wound with twine, and the wearing of geles (in Yoruba, colorful, often elaborately wrapped head cloths) are among the commonplace African styles adopted by African American women. Some cornrowed hairstyles can take hours to execute. Some cornrowed hairstyles can take hours to execute. In the wake of the Black Pride Movement, hundreds of beauty shops and salons sprang up across the United States delivering services exclusively, or as part of a range of options, to blacks who prefer natural (unstraightened) hairstyles. Many salons specialize in hair wrapping and braiding techniques, executing styles which can be exceedingly time-consuming and expensive. A single, braided style can take seven hours or more to complete, sometimes necessitating two or more salon visits. The tradeoff in the cost in time and money expended is that a well-executed, braided style can last a month or more without restyling, if properly groomed and cared for—and if executed on the naturally coarse, tightly coiled hair typically possessed by people of Sub-Saharan African descent. Cornrows also enjoyed some popularity among Caucasians after blonde actress Bo Derek wore beaded cornrows in the popular Blake Edwards movie 10, and became widely popular once again with the spread of hip-hop culture in the 1990s. Cornrow hairstyles are now often offered to tourists in resort areas of the Caribbean. Cornrows are used by people of African ancestry in many different regions of the world. However, some controversy over them has emerged in Nigeria, where hair braiding among men is alleged to be a sign of femininity or homosexuality.[1] Over the years, cornrows (along with dreadlocks) have been the subject of several disputes in the American workplace (see The Allen Iverson Movement). Some employers have deemed them unsuitable for the office and have banned them - especially at-will firings and/or termination. African American employees and civil rights groups have countered that such attitudes evidence racial and cultural bias. Some such disputes have resulted in litigation. ** Powered by Yahoo Answers |
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