A document prepared with respect to the enquiry which includes the analyses of the technical & commercial aspects of the requirement.
The technocommercial bid involves evaluation of technical documents, estimation, costing,technical clarifications/confirmations & commercial aspects with respect to the requirement.
about $1000,00,000
Bid Edie's real name is Edith Ewing Bouvier Beale.
A web-site devoted to Bach cantatas translates it as 'I want to bid you farewell'.
Why dont you find out for yourself at Ebay with a pic. you can place bid for the highest offer.
New york for right now while he is doing his bid in Rikers
bid
of Bid, p. p. of Bid.
No, it is not. Greet is a verb meaning to bid welcome.
No. By making a bid-or-bunch opening, you are declaring that you can and may bid if somebody else opens, but if all others bid-or-bunch or pass, that you are agreeing to "bunch" the deck, meaning everybody tosses in their hands and the cards are shuffled and re-dealt.
3 mg (milligrams - 0.003g) bid (bis in die - meaning twice a day)3 milligrams two times a day
The future tense of bid is "will bid" or "shall bid."
Apoluo means to let go. To bid depart or send away. To detain no longer.
The past perfect is formed with - had + past participle.The past participle of bid is bid -- (this is bid as in bid at an auction).He had bid a large amount for the painting.
Sometimes! Many players agree to use 2NT as an artificial forcing bid in most auctions, whose meaning depends on the context. 2NT is usually more useful as an artificial bid than a limited invitation, especially in competitive auctions.
you bid
It means 1(one) tab (tablet) BID (twice a day).BID means Two times a day. The drugs to be taken Two times daily.
bid... it's the same word in the present tense Answer: * The infinitive form is to bid - "I want to bid on the item." * Present tense is bid - "We bid what we can." * Past tense is bid - "They bid $500,000 and got the house." * Present participle is bidding - "He is bidding them farewell." * Past participle is bid - "I have bid all I can afford." (Helping verb required)