Mathematics trivia for any one that is smart.?
Q. if your dad pays you 5.00 and hour. but you wash between 12-5 second but the max is 45 min how much money. would he make if he wash his hand for 90 min in a day. how much money does he make in us dollars ($) and how much times did he wash his hand in highest term. hop it is not to hard. but it is a trivia
Asked by Atif - Wed Jan 28 20:36:42 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. umm... i like math and my head kinda hurts now :[ wat is the answer???
Answered by Johanna - Wed Jan 28 20:45:03 2009
Q. if your dad pays you 5.00 and hour. but you wash between 12-5 second but the max is 45 min how much money. would he make if he wash his hand for 90 min in a day. how much money does he make in us dollars ($) and how much times did he wash his hand in highest term. hop it is not to hard. but it is a trivia
Asked by Atif - Wed Jan 28 20:36:42 2009 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. umm... i like math and my head kinda hurts now :[ wat is the answer???
Answered by Johanna - Wed Jan 28 20:45:03 2009
give me 5 simple mathematics trivia?
Q. give me 5 simple mathematics trivia?
Asked by ANGEL - Sun Aug 24 22:59:20 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A.
Answered by Feisty - Mon Aug 25 02:35:11 2008
Q. give me 5 simple mathematics trivia?
Asked by ANGEL - Sun Aug 24 22:59:20 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A.
Answered by Feisty - Mon Aug 25 02:35:11 2008
What are the trivia in Mathematics? Not all but somehow many...?
Q. What are the trivia in Mathematics? Not all but somehow many...?
Asked by sIlvErmOOn - Mon Oct 6 06:07:38 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. You can make any number with enough 1's.
Answered by No, I won't do your homework - Mon Oct 6 23:40:57 2008
Q. What are the trivia in Mathematics? Not all but somehow many...?
Asked by sIlvErmOOn - Mon Oct 6 06:07:38 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. You can make any number with enough 1's.
Answered by No, I won't do your homework - Mon Oct 6 23:40:57 2008
what does TRIVIA mean?
Q. What is mathematics trivia??
Asked by prabhu - Sun Nov 16 10:06:51 2008 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Trivia: "'trivialities, things of little consequence,' 1902, popularized as title of a book by L.P. Smith, from L. trivia, pl. of trivium 'place where three roads meet.'" A trivium was inconsequential because it was a backwater crossroads. It isn't knowledge that is necessarily useful, but it's little tidbits about a subject that are considered interesting. Mathematical trivia could be: Interesting biographical information about famous mathematicians: Sir Isaac Newton may have died a virgin Interesting facts about aspects of mathematics itself: The history of the zero. The fact that the Babylonians used a base 60 number system. A googolplex is a higher number than the number of atoms in the universe. The highest known prime. The highest… [cont.]
Answered by Cirape - Sun Nov 16 13:02:48 2008
Q. What is mathematics trivia??
Asked by prabhu - Sun Nov 16 10:06:51 2008 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Trivia: "'trivialities, things of little consequence,' 1902, popularized as title of a book by L.P. Smith, from L. trivia, pl. of trivium 'place where three roads meet.'" A trivium was inconsequential because it was a backwater crossroads. It isn't knowledge that is necessarily useful, but it's little tidbits about a subject that are considered interesting. Mathematical trivia could be: Interesting biographical information about famous mathematicians: Sir Isaac Newton may have died a virgin Interesting facts about aspects of mathematics itself: The history of the zero. The fact that the Babylonians used a base 60 number system. A googolplex is a higher number than the number of atoms in the universe. The highest known prime. The highest… [cont.]
Answered by Cirape - Sun Nov 16 13:02:48 2008
Trivia buffs! Can you answer these questions?
Q. As an IB student, I love trivia. So, I compiled a series of questions for you to answer. If I get good feedback from you, I will continue to post trivia. No cheating please...good luck! :) geography: The intersection of which two streets marks the official center of Chicago? ZOOLOGY: "Phascolarctos Cinereus" is the species name for which animal? language: Count from one to five in Romanian. HISTORY: What city hosted the ironically named "Serenity Olympics"? ANATOMY: What tube isn't draining properly when a child suffers from "glue ear"? literature: What American poet rhymed "Penelope" with "envelope" and "zebra" with "algebra"? MUSIC & entertainment: Antonio Stradivari is deemed the finest in which craft? astronomy: Name four of… [cont.]
Asked by moo - Sat Dec 6 13:21:19 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Mathematics: I believe it's 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34 and so on. It's something along the lines of having a term being the sum of the two terms preceding it. Or something like that. Art: Liberty Leading the People. I don't know how to say that in French. Psychology: Unconditioned stimulus was the food, meat, meat powder, etc. Music and Entertainment: He made violins.
Answered by josh b - Sat Dec 6 13:31:09 2008
Q. As an IB student, I love trivia. So, I compiled a series of questions for you to answer. If I get good feedback from you, I will continue to post trivia. No cheating please...good luck! :) geography: The intersection of which two streets marks the official center of Chicago? ZOOLOGY: "Phascolarctos Cinereus" is the species name for which animal? language: Count from one to five in Romanian. HISTORY: What city hosted the ironically named "Serenity Olympics"? ANATOMY: What tube isn't draining properly when a child suffers from "glue ear"? literature: What American poet rhymed "Penelope" with "envelope" and "zebra" with "algebra"? MUSIC & entertainment: Antonio Stradivari is deemed the finest in which craft? astronomy: Name four of… [cont.]
Asked by moo - Sat Dec 6 13:21:19 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Mathematics: I believe it's 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,34 and so on. It's something along the lines of having a term being the sum of the two terms preceding it. Or something like that. Art: Liberty Leading the People. I don't know how to say that in French. Psychology: Unconditioned stimulus was the food, meat, meat powder, etc. Music and Entertainment: He made violins.
Answered by josh b - Sat Dec 6 13:31:09 2008
pi trivia quiz!! get ten points for nothing!!?
Q. 1) who, in 1706, first gave the greek letter "pi" its current mathematical definition? 2) pi is transcendental. what does this mean, in mathematics? 3) if you calculated the circumference of a circle the size of the known universe, requiring that the answer be accurate within the radius of one proton, how many decimal places of pi would you need to use? (i.e., 3.14, or 3.1415, or 3.141526, etc)? 4)what is the earliest known reference to pi in history (as in the bible?? what) 5) people tried for centuries to "square the circle". what were they trying to do? 6) some people became mentally deranged when trying to "square the circle". what was this illness named? 7) are pi's periodical? in other words, do the digits ever repeat themselves in… [cont.]
Asked by pi trivia quiz - Thu Mar 13 17:25:07 2008 - - 6 Answers - 1 Comments
A. 1. The Greek letter , often spelled out pi in text, was adopted for the number from the Greek word for perimeter " ", probably by William Jones in 1706 , and popularized by Leonhard Euler some years later. 2. It is a transcendental number, which means that no finite sequence of algebraic operations on integers (powers, roots, sums, etc.) could ever produce it. 3. 4. That the ratio of the circumference to the diameter of a circle is the same for all circles, and that it is slightly more than 3, was known to ancient Egyptian, Babylonian, Indian and Greek geometers. The earliest known approximations date from around 1900 BC; they are 25/8 (Babylonia) and 256/81 (Egypt), both within 1% of the true value. The Indian text Shatapatha… [cont.]
Answered by NARAYAN RAO - Thu Mar 13 19:08:27 2008
Q. 1) who, in 1706, first gave the greek letter "pi" its current mathematical definition? 2) pi is transcendental. what does this mean, in mathematics? 3) if you calculated the circumference of a circle the size of the known universe, requiring that the answer be accurate within the radius of one proton, how many decimal places of pi would you need to use? (i.e., 3.14, or 3.1415, or 3.141526, etc)? 4)what is the earliest known reference to pi in history (as in the bible?? what) 5) people tried for centuries to "square the circle". what were they trying to do? 6) some people became mentally deranged when trying to "square the circle". what was this illness named? 7) are pi's periodical? in other words, do the digits ever repeat themselves in… [cont.]
Asked by pi trivia quiz - Thu Mar 13 17:25:07 2008 - - 6 Answers - 1 Comments
A. 1. The Greek letter , often spelled out pi in text, was adopted for the number from the Greek word for perimeter " ", probably by William Jones in 1706 , and popularized by Leonhard Euler some years later. 2. It is a transcendental number, which means that no finite sequence of algebraic operations on integers (powers, roots, sums, etc.) could ever produce it. 3. 4. That the ratio of the circumference to the diameter of a circle is the same for all circles, and that it is slightly more than 3, was known to ancient Egyptian, Babylonian, Indian and Greek geometers. The earliest known approximations date from around 1900 BC; they are 25/8 (Babylonia) and 256/81 (Egypt), both within 1% of the true value. The Indian text Shatapatha… [cont.]
Answered by NARAYAN RAO - Thu Mar 13 19:08:27 2008
When was the last friday the 13th full moon?
Q. These were the choices from my favorite people Yahoo-- - Science & Mathematics > Astronomy & Space Society & Culture > Mythology & Folklore Entertainment & Music > Movies Entertainment & Music > Horoscopes Education & Reference > Trivia
Asked by Space - Mon Nov 2 20:41:06 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. LOL. You have a better chance of getting an answer if you take Yahoo's advice and post in correct section. That would be choice number one. *You are in luck. I had too much time on my hands. lol October 13, 2000
Answered by Mars, Mars & More MARS!!! - Mon Nov 2 20:46:40 2009
Q. These were the choices from my favorite people Yahoo-- - Science & Mathematics > Astronomy & Space Society & Culture > Mythology & Folklore Entertainment & Music > Movies Entertainment & Music > Horoscopes Education & Reference > Trivia
Asked by Space - Mon Nov 2 20:41:06 2009 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. LOL. You have a better chance of getting an answer if you take Yahoo's advice and post in correct section. That would be choice number one. *You are in luck. I had too much time on my hands. lol October 13, 2000
Answered by Mars, Mars & More MARS!!! - Mon Nov 2 20:46:40 2009
wat is the square route of -1?
Q. my dad is a mathematics genius and he asks me a lot of trivia and math questions and the latest is what are the square route of -1? please help
Asked by Zoey M - Sat Feb 14 15:09:46 2009 - - 6 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. my dad is a mathematics genius and he asks me a lot of trivia and math questions and the latest is what are the square route of -1? please help
Asked by Zoey M - Sat Feb 14 15:09:46 2009 - - 6 Answers - 0 Comments
pi trivia quiz!! get ten points for nothing!!?
Q. 1) who, in 1706, first gave the greek letter "pi" its current mathematical definition? 2) pi is transcendental. what does this mean, in mathematics? 3) if you calculated the circumference of a circle the size of the known universe, requiring that the answer be accurate within the radius of one proton, how many decimal places of pi would you need to use? (i.e., 3.14, or 3.1415, or 3.141526, etc)? 4)what is the earliest known reference to pi in history (as in the bible?? what) 5) people tried for centuries to "square the circle". what were they trying to do? 6) some people became mentally deranged when trying to "square the circle". what was this illness named? 7) are pi's periodical? in other words, do the digits ever repeat themselves in… [cont.]
Asked by pi trivia quiz - Thu Mar 13 17:25:19 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. most if these answers are wrong. so don't listen to that fool.
Answered by jazzypha10 - Fri Mar 14 13:49:38 2008
Q. 1) who, in 1706, first gave the greek letter "pi" its current mathematical definition? 2) pi is transcendental. what does this mean, in mathematics? 3) if you calculated the circumference of a circle the size of the known universe, requiring that the answer be accurate within the radius of one proton, how many decimal places of pi would you need to use? (i.e., 3.14, or 3.1415, or 3.141526, etc)? 4)what is the earliest known reference to pi in history (as in the bible?? what) 5) people tried for centuries to "square the circle". what were they trying to do? 6) some people became mentally deranged when trying to "square the circle". what was this illness named? 7) are pi's periodical? in other words, do the digits ever repeat themselves in… [cont.]
Asked by pi trivia quiz - Thu Mar 13 17:25:19 2008 - - 3 Answers - 0 Comments
A. most if these answers are wrong. so don't listen to that fool.
Answered by jazzypha10 - Fri Mar 14 13:49:38 2008
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'mathematics trivia'
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