Every week I'll put a new impossible question on here and post it! I'll aslo post my fave awnswer!
Ok, here we goWhat would Scratch cat look like in cubism?
Qs so far
£2050-68 degrees
Fave A
Ace-Of-Spades wrote:
Stop posting your homework on the forums
Last edited by jukyter (2010-01-19 11:59:14)
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The answer is √42π°
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Stop posting your homework on the forums
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jukyter wrote:
Ok, first one £2050-68 degrees
Two thousand fifty British pounds minus 68 degrees? What?
Last edited by Kileymeister (2010-01-17 11:15:23)
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Kileymeister wrote:
jukyter wrote:
Ok, first one £2050-68 degrees
Two thousand fifty British pounds minus 68 degrees? What?
It's meant to be a creepy question.
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Ace-of-Spades wrote:
Stop posting your homework on the forums
But it isn't mine it's from... um.... you caught me!
My favioute!
Last edited by jukyter (2010-01-18 11:50:31)
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Oh and thanks for posting my homework for me.
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filo5 wrote:
posting again:
Simple. You have to convert amount of money (in coins) to it's melting temperature, then subtract 68
In what coins, though? One pence? Two pence? Five pence? Ten pence? Twenty pence? Fifty pence? Pound coins? Two pound coins? Commemorative and rare five pound coins?
Heh heh - I guess I went a bit over the top there. They're all different alloys, so I guess they'd have different melting points
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Wolfie1996 wrote:
filo5 wrote:
posting again:
Simple. You have to convert amount of money (in coins) to it's melting temperature, then subtract 68In what coins, though? One pence? Two pence? Five pence? Ten pence? Twenty pence? Fifty pence? Pound coins? Two pound coins? Commemorative and rare five pound coins?
Heh heh - I guess I went a bit over the top there. They're all different alloys, so I guess they'd have different melting points
Hmmm... I'd say notes and some other coins.
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jukyter wrote:
juststickman wrote:
Oh and thanks for posting my homework for me.
Yours too?
Yup. We may not have the same homework though, it could just be a coincidence.
Here are some of the questions:
Convert these expressions into a temperature:
1. [(√$250+£850)/(π^π)]
2. -|√waffles|
Answer the following word problems with fish species:
1. Floatingmagictree has decided that the name FMT is not good, and float is good. What are the chances of Floatingmagictree deciding that the name FPT is good?
2. What is the closest thing to the scratch cat that lives in space?
3. Explain why 2+2 does not equal 2+2
Choose the best possible answer for each question:
1. What is the meaning of life?
A: waffles
B: bananas
C: soda
D: strudel
2. Why did the touch chair stop caring?
A: because it didn't
B: it ran out of batteries
C: Pepyn V.H. is a bad company
D: what's a touch chair
3. (choose the best word to fill in the blank) I am a_______
A: waffle
B: waffIe
C: \/\/affle
D: waƒƒle
Extra credit: answer the following question
1. Prove that √-1 can exist. Your argument is invalid.
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jukyter wrote:
Wolfie1996 wrote:
filo5 wrote:
posting again:
Simple. You have to convert amount of money (in coins) to it's melting temperature, then subtract 68In what coins, though? One pence? Two pence? Five pence? Ten pence? Twenty pence? Fifty pence? Pound coins? Two pound coins? Commemorative and rare five pound coins?
Heh heh - I guess I went a bit over the top there. They're all different alloys, so I guess they'd have different melting pointsHmmm... I'd say notes and some other coins.
Notes burn, they don't melt
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Kileymeister wrote:
jukyter wrote:
Wolfie1996 wrote:
In what coins, though? One pence? Two pence? Five pence? Ten pence? Twenty pence? Fifty pence? Pound coins? Two pound coins? Commemorative and rare five pound coins?
Heh heh - I guess I went a bit over the top there. They're all different alloys, so I guess they'd have different melting pointsHmmm... I'd say notes and some other coins.
Notes burn, they don't melt
Or do they...
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well 2068 euros? i think ios roughly 4120 $, and in canada, we use these copper coins as 1$, so 4120 x copper's melting point - 68 degrees
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You might want to update your favorites and add another question.
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w = 123
ew + sw + nw = w
ew - sw = n
n > 1
w < 1
e = ???????
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everythingRhymes wrote:
w = 123
ew + sw + nw = w
ew + sw = n
n > 1
w < 1
e = ???????
The answer is :
s=-1
n=1
w=-1
e=1
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juststickman wrote:
everythingRhymes wrote:
w = 123
ew + sw + nw = w
ew + sw = n
n > 1
w < 1
e = ???????The answer is :
s=-1
n=1
w=-1
e=1
I was going to post that, but it says w=123...
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that's the trick.
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