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Dương Linh đã đặt câu hỏi: Biểu cảm về quê hương Cách đây 5 năm
Biểu cảm về quê hương
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Dương Linh đã trả lời trong câu hỏi: How many planets are there in my solar system? Cách đây 5 năm
There are eight planets in the solar system: Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn Uranus, and Neptune. The four inner solar system planets (Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars) fall under the category of terrestrial planets; Jupiter and Saturn are gas giants (giant plants composed mostly of hydrogen and helium) while Uranus and Neptune are the ice giants (containing mainly elements heavier than hydrogen and helium ).Pluto, a dwarf planet, was classified as one of the solar system planets when it was first discovered by Clyde Tombaugh. However, it is now considered to be one of the largest known members of the Kuiper Belt—a collection of icy bodies on the outer fringes of the solar system. Pluto was demoted from its planetary status in 2006 when a body of scientists decided a formalized definition for the term “planet.”
According to the International Astronomical Union's definition, a planet is “a celestial body that (a) is in orbit around the Sun, (b) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape, and (c) has cleared the neighborhood around its orbit.” Because Pluto is part of the Kuiper Belt, and therefore has not met the third criterion, it is no longer considered a planet. Instead, it is classified as a dwarf planet. Other dwarf planets include Ceres, Haumea, Makemake, and Eris.
With an atmosphere, stark surface features, and at least five moons, Pluto is the most complex dwarf planet we know, and one of the most surprising solar system planets. New Horizons flew by our favorite dwarf planet in July 2015 and scientists continue to uncover surprising details about this faraway world.
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Dương Linh đã trả lời trong câu hỏi: Viết một bài luận Cách đây 5 năm
Hung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNAHung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNAHung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNAHung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNAHung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNAHung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNAHung Yen (VNA) – A contest was launched in the Red River Delta province of Hung Yen on August 15, seeking initiatives, new models and products that can help to reduce plastic waste.
Themed “Say no to plastic waste,” the contest is jointly held by the Vietnam Environment & Urban Magazine and Hung Yen Urban Environment and Public Works Ltd., Co.
Through the contest, authors of feasible initiatives and models will be connected with businesses and agencies so that those ideas will be implemented nationwide.
Entries can be sent to the organisers via post and email, or to the magazine’s representative offices from August 15, 2019 to February 15 next year.
The first, second, third and consolidation prizes will be presented to the most outstanding initiatives, models and products at a ceremony slated for June 5, 2020, in coincidence with the World Environment Day.
At the contest’s launch, the organising board highlighted the threat posed by plastic waste to the world and Vietnam in particular, citing the United Nations Environment Programme report which said the world uses up to 500 billion plastic bags and discharges around 300 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. About 40 percent of plastic produced is used for packaging.
Meanwhile, Vietnam discharges about 1.8 million tonnes of plastic every year, standing 17th among 109 countries in terms of the plastic waste volume released.
Of that amount, some 730,000 tonnes are released to the oceans, accounting for some 6 percent of the world’s plastic volume dumped at sea. That has made the country the fourth biggest polluter of ocean plastic waste.
The country aims to reduce the volume of non-biodegradable plastic bags used at supermarkets and shopping malls by 65 percent by 2020 compare to 2010. By 2026, it targets zero non-biodegradable plastic bags.-VNA -
Dương Linh đã trả lời trong câu hỏi: Viết 1 bài tiếng anh, chủ đề về friend Cách đây 5 năm
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Dương Linh đã trả lời trong câu hỏi: Giải nghĩa những từ sau đây: Pussy face, Huge Dick, Too Deep, Fucking go Cách đây 5 năm
Điểm thưởng gần đây (2)
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Dương Linh: câu trả lời bị xoá, user trả lời -10 (-10đ) Cách đây 2 năm
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Dương Linh: câu trả lời vi phạm, user trả lời -10 (-10đ) Cách đây 2 năm