Joan of Arc
depends on whose football you like more.i personally am a united fan. because i enjoy there game of looking for space, passing alot and the history of united on the whole. however Chelsea has there own football. there aggresive plays, torturing the opposition defence.So basically either you support the club that plays for your place. united for Manchester and Chelsea for London. Or you support the team whose football you enjoy more.
When a team has a player whose contract has expired, he goes into free agency. This is when teams submit offers to players whose contracts have expired from other teams.
Depending on where you live and what you do for a living, writing in English may or may not be a requirement. If you live in the United States, England, or other countries whose primary language is English or you have contact with these countries frequently, you will probably be required to write in English.
Don't know whose scored the most.....but i do know Dwight Yorke for Manchester United scored basically every goal with his head
There are several football teams in England with the letter "x" in their name, including Exeter City, Oxford United, and Wrexham AFC. These teams compete in various divisions of the English football league system, with Exeter City currently playing in League Two, Oxford United in League One, and Wrexham AFC in the National League. The presence of the letter "x" in their names does not necessarily have any specific significance in relation to their performance or history in English football.
No because "whose's" is not a word recognized in the English language. It is either used as "whose" or "whose is".
Did you know that the show "Whose Line is it anyway?" is actually an English show that was shot in the United Kingdom, regardless of its popularity in the US?
Ruud van Nistelrooy was a Dutch soccer/football player whose career spanned from 1993 to 2012. Information about him can be found via the Premier League's website as well as that of the individual teams he played for.
Is there a player who starts with k
"To grind or to strike together" is the meaning of the English word "gnash." The pronunciation of the verb in question -- whose use typically involves gnashing, grinding, striking together teeth -- will be "nash" in the English of the United States of America.
"About" and "around" are meanings of the English abbreviation "ca." The two letters stand for the Latin word circa, whose translation into English generally involves the two above-mentioned options. The pronunciation will be "SUR-kuh" in the English of the United States of America.