By because does any of the other answers work it’s just common sense right there
Enig-ma
The word enigma had its first known use in the mid 16th century, used as a noun to refer to a person, thing or situation considered obscure or concealed/unknown.
As is the case with more than 50% of English words, which have either Latin or Greek roots references, enigma has two root references. The word<em> aenigma</em> from the Latin language, means riddle and from the Greek word <em>ainigma</em> obtained from the word <em>ainissesthai</em> which means to speak in riddles derived from ainos - fable.
Prefix:
In this case there is no identifiable prefix.
Suffix:
A letter or group of words that when placed after the main word changes it meaning or gramatical function.
-ma is related to -ment (Middle English) concrete result of something... from the same Greek noun suffix - mat / -ma
Hello! There are three commonly used rules when writing out numbers in literature.
The first one is numbers under "10" are written out as words (i.e 1-> one, 2-> two, 3-> three, ect)
The second one is if the number is representing a date, you write it in numerical form (i.e years stay in their number-forms)
The final rule is the one that applies for you is that if the number is the first word of the sentence, then you write it as a word instead of it's numerical form.
So the correct way you'd write your sentence is, "Twenty-six people posted messages to my blog in just thirty minutes."
Explanation:
Wealth when time goes it ends up finished, and they can rob u and hv nothing. With education it's a lifetime archivement no one can take it away from you and education is knowledge which one gain, that means no one can rob you it
Hope this will help