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Help with a level maths question - The Student Room 19 Apr 2022 · A uniform ladder of mass 8 kg and length 4 m is placed against a smooth wall, with its foot on rough horizontal ground, making an angle of 60° with the ground. A woman of mass …
is 5'4, 60kg fat for a girl - The Student Room 24 Jun 2020 · Insecurities as a Tall girl; 5ft 4 and i weigh 160 pounds, is this considered fat? Do boys have a problem with dating chubby girls
Students react after GCSE Maths Paper 1 on 15 May 2025 15 May 2025 · 0 new posts ; Word association game. Started by: always-anxious
a total of 169.6 million 60-kilogram bags of coffee 24 Dec 2021 · Presumably the 60 kg bags are important for the context, otherwise this would be a daft way of writing it. 169.6 million 60-kilogram bags of coffee is about 10 million tons of coffee. …
Can you please help me with these math questions? Now given one kg costs £1.44, 3.5kg must cost 3.5 × \times × £1.44 = £5.04 2) If you have a number, say 9.824, by convention (keep in mind this convention literally just exists because …
I am 60 kgs.? - WordReference Forums 7 Jul 2008 · Hello everybody, I´d like to know how you say in English "Peso 60 kgs." I weigh 60 or I am 60 Kgs? A student of mine wrote "I am 60 Kgs." Is that OK?
D x W x H / W x L x D - WordReference Forums 3 Sep 2010 · Hi, in the manual I read the dimensions given as 'D x W x H'. I am confused as I think that D (depth) and H (height) have the same meaning. Can you make it clear for me please.
15th May 2025 [Exam Chat] - The Student Room 15 May 2025 · 60. Last reply 1 week ago. Edexcel GCSE Mathematics Paper 1 (Foundation) - Thursday, May 15, 2025 [Exam Chat]
Forces acting on a mass attached to a string help? 10 Jun 2017 · I got confused due to this question: A ball of mass 0.30 kg is attached to a string and moves in a vertical circle of radius 0.60 m at a constant speed of 5.0 m s–1. What are the …
A level maths - The Student Room 5 May 2025 · To find that force, use their mass (m1 = 60 kg) and acceleration due to gravity (g = 9.8 ms^-2). The rope's also pulling up on them. We refer to that force as tension. Let's refer to …