don't text, read a book _______________ Depends on your cell phone plan. Usually one text per contact
On skype, you are able to message people of your choice, call a single person or multiple people, and even video chat one or multiple people.
You may be talking about somebody who had a hung jury or something and was charged again when they had the better evidence!
yes, for example:If to people are in a car and one person is in possession, then you will both be charged.
It's probably cheaper to use twitter as you can send a message to multiple people at once. If you were to do this through text, you would be charged for each person you send it to.Even if you have unlimited texts, someone might prefer to "tweet" as it's less time consuming.
Hard to tell what you're trying to ask. No, a person cannot be charged for having an illness. Having an illness is not a crime. No, having multiple illnesses is not a defense for a crime, and will not prevent indictment if the crime can be charged.
To one person: 'acquire vitam' To multiple people: 'acquirete vitas' "Get a job" To one person: 'acquire professionem' To multiple people: 'acquirete professiones' "Get a hobby" To one person: 'acquire requietem' To multiple people: 'acquirete requietes'
Type @username (their username) then your message and then click send. Your message, or tweet, will then appear in the person's mentions tab.
If you are wanting to date seriously then go with a single person. If you are wanting to explore your options then go ahead with dating multiple people.
It's extremely rare for a person receiving a text message to be charged for it. It's usually the sender who gets billed for it !
It stands for carbon copy, so you can send the same email to multiple people without having to recreate it for each person.
A multiple count indictment is a legal document that charges a defendant with multiple offenses arising from the same set of circumstances. Each count in the indictment represents a separate charge that the defendant will have to defend against in court.
A person charged with a crime is the accused or the defendant.