Q: Use the following steps to download the Photo Resizer app.   Open your Android's Google Play Store. Tap the search bar. Type in photo resizer hd. Tap Photo Resizer HD. Tap INSTALL. Tap ACCEPT. Wait for the app to install. Tap OPEN in the Google Play Store, or tap the Photo Resizer HD icon on your home screen. It has a blue icon with four arrows pointing in. It's in the middle of the screen. This will open your Photo Gallery app. It will open in the Photo Resizer HD app. This is the Resize icon. This icon opens the resize menu. It's at the top of the menu. Alternatively, you can tap one of the image dimensions in the list to quickly resize the image. There are two text fields for the horizontal and vertical dimensions. You can use either to edit the photo size. Tap the text field and then type the number you want for the image size. For example, if the text field has "300" written in it, you would replace it with "150" to halve the image's file size. You cloud also replace it with "600" to double the file size. Check that the checkbox next to "Keep aspect ratio" is checked to ensure that the image size stays proportional as you resize the image. It's at the bottom of the menu. This will apply your changes to the photo. This floppy disk-shaped icon is in the top-right corner of the screen. This saves the photo to your Android's Photo Gallery using your new dimensions.
A: Download the free Photo Resizer HD app from the Google Play Store . Open Photo Resizer HD. Tap Gallery. Tap the photo that you want to resize. Tap the icon with a diagonal arrow. Tap Custom. Type a new image size number in the text field. Tap OK. Tap the icon that resembles a floppy disk.

Q: For the first few days after surgery, don't use a straw to sip beverages or foods like smoothies. The suction could disturb the healing process. It’s important to make sure that you drink plenty of water after your surgery. This will keep mouth moist and help avoid dry socket and infection.  Avoid caffeinated and carbonated beverages during the first day.  Avoid alcohol for at least a week after surgery. Hot drinks such as tea, coffee, or cocoa could dislodge the blood clots forming in the empty socket where your wisdom tooth was. These blood clots are necessary to the healing process. soft or liquid food. Don't eat anything that could get caught in the empty sockets or disrupt clotting. Use your other teeth to chew, if you have to chew your food. This will minimize the amount of food that can get stuck in between your teeth and potentially cause infection.  In the first day post-op, eat foods like yogurt and applesauce, which won’t irritate your mouth or get lodged in your teeth, which could cause infection. Soft oatmeal or cream of wheat are other good options.  Avoid, hard, chewy, brittle, very hot or spicy foods that might irritate the surgery site or get lodged in your teeth, making the conditions ripe for infection.  Rinse with warm salt water after every meal for the first week following surgery. If you smoke or chew tobacco, avoid them for as long as possible. Doing this will help ensure a full and timely recovery and also keep infection and inflammation at bay.  Consuming tobacco following oral surgery can delay healing and also increases your risk for complications such as infection.  If you smoke, wait at least 72 hours to have a cigarette.  If you chew tobacco, don't use it for at least a week. It’s normal to have pain for a few days following the removal of your wisdom teeth. Use either over the counter pain relievers or a prescription pain medication to help alleviate pain and some swelling.  Take NSAIDs (nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) such as ibuprofen or naproxen. These will help alleviate some of the swelling associated with the surgery. You can also use acetaminophen, but this does not manage inflammation. Your doctor may prescribe a pain medication if over the counter pain relief doesn’t work for you. You’ll likely have some swelling for a few days after surgery. This is normal and applying an ice pack to your cheeks will help reduce swelling and pain, including around your teeth.  The swelling usually goes away after 2-3 days.  Patient should relax and avoid strenuous activity or exercise until swelling resolves.
A: Do not use a straw. Drink plenty of water. Avoid hot drinks. Eat Avoid tobacco. Take pain medication. Use an ice pack for swelling and pain.

Q: The present indicative is almost always the first verb form you will learn when studying Spanish. It is used to talk about current actions. In the case of leer, the present indicative is used to refer to the act of reading when that act is presently going on.  Example: "She is reading the novel," Ella lee la novela.  yo: leo  tú: lees él/ella/usted: lee nosotros/-as: leemos vosotros/-as: leéis ellos/ellas/ustedes: leen Use the preterit indicative to refer to the act of reading when that act has concretely happened in the past and has since come to a clear end and is no longer being performed.  The verb leer is irregular in the preterit indicative. Example: "I read that novel last month," Lei esa novela el mes pasado.  yo: leí tú: leíste él/ella/usted: leyó nosotros/-as: leímos vosotros/-as: leísteis ellos/ellas/ustedes: leyeron The conditional indicative is used to describe an act of reading that would be done at some point in the future as long as another condition or circumstance ends up being true.  Example: "In that case, Pablo would read Hemingway's novel," En ese caso, Pablo leería la novela de Hemingway.  yo: leería tú: leerías él/ella/usted: leería nosotros/-as: leeríamos vosotros/-as: leeríais ellos/ellas/ustedes: leerían
A:
Use the present indicative. Conjugate leer in the preterit indicative. Switch to the conditional indicative.