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They feel friendly towards the faraway train but afraid of the engineer when he is near.
As far as i know the title for a women is "DAME" . i know of one Ms. Dame Maggie Smith.
None, so far.
The Roman empresses originally had no title. Livia, the widow of Augustus was granted the title "Augusta" and that's as far as it went. There may have been some women who used the title in the later part of the empire, but it was not "official", that is, granted by the senate.
No, think about it, if you are near sighted you can see near, if you are far sighted you can see far, if you are both you can see both No, think about it, if you are near sighted you can see near, if you are far sighted you can see far, if you are both you can see both
The Esperanto words for near and far are proksime and malproksime.
Far and near. It's better if they're swapped around to become near and far.
The opposite of the word far is near because if something is far away, it is not near. Another antonym is close, or nearby.
The opposite of the word far is near because if something is far away, it is not near. Another antonym is close, or nearby.
Near. The phrase is more commonly known as 'near and far'.
As far as I understand it you cannot sell any motor vehicle to an automotive dealership without the title. Also if the vehicle is not titled in your name the said individual seen on the title would need to be present. The process to getting a title for your vehicle if it has been lost is simple as long as you are the registered owner of the vehicle. The process for acquiring a replacement title is called bonding the title. If you are not the owner on the title the same "bonding" applies it just requires you to get the previous owner of the vehicle involved in the process with a proper bill of sale and or other means of proof that you have taken "ownership" of the vehicle.
When your jurisdiction has a law, be it common law or statute, that says it applies. In the US, as far as I know, no states have a year and a day rule.