Argentineans usually refer to women as "minas". Typically, "Minas de fierro" are those girls/women that are great companions in good and bad times, and who someone can truly rely on. I'm an Argentinean myself and I use this term pretty frequently :)
Mindray Medical International Limited's motto is 'A Global Partner You Can Rely On'.
Literal translations rarely have the same meaning in both languages, and most translations rely on the greater context of the sentence and/or scenario. For example, the literal translation of "not much" is 'no mucho." But depending on your context, you might also use "No hay mucho (there is not much of a particular physical object)," "poco/poquito (little/infrequent)," or any number of minimizing words. If you mean it as in a response to "What's up?" ("¿Qué tal?" or "¿Qué pasa?") the answer is usually "nada", which means "nothing" in Spanish.
Mr. Carpenter decides not to live alone because he is getting too weak. He doesn't want to wait until it's too late, and then have to rely on his daughters to take care of him. He is fiercely independent and is preventing being unable to make the "last decision".
Riddles are mysteries to be solved. In the modern use, riddles are jokes, usually questions that have a trick answer. Most use wordplay, in that the answer depends upon some sly interpretation of the way the question is phrased. The answer may be part of the question itself, or may rely on misdirection. Examples: -- "The capital of Kenya is in the center of the country. How do you spell it?" ("I-T") -- "If every single person left town, who would be left?" ("All of the married couples.") -- "What word do the smartest people in the world always spell incorrectly?" (The word "i-n-c-o-r-r-e-c-t-l-y") dont read humptydumpty he rapes in your dreams and it hurts so much from local scientist
the sound of words that resemble each other phonetically. Rhyme creates a sense of rhythm and repetition in a poem or song, enhancing its musical quality and making it more memorable to the listener.
science relies on nothing, we rely on it :D
no
The verbs of reliable, depending on the tense, are rely, relies, relying and relied.Some example sentences using them are:"We rely on her"."She relies on donations for her children"."We are relying on public funds"."They relied on you".
The third person singular form of rely is "relies."
For the third-person singular (he, she, it), the present tense is "relies." For all other persons, the present tense is "rely." Examples: I rely on my friend to check my mail. You may rely on regular service. We rely on city government for many services. They rely on their parents for everything. He relies on the local news for his weather information.
it relies on two one is mining
The verb of reliance is rely. For example "to rely on something or someone". Relying and relies can also be used as verbs.
"Rely" doesn't have either a prefix or a suffix. You could add the prefix un- and the suffix -able to make the word "unreliable."
Los Angeles relies on the Pacific Ocean for shipping.
A digital forecast is a forecast that relies on numerical data.
The likely word is the verb, to rely (forms relies, relied, relying) - to count on.The similar adverb is really (very).