Assuming several things:
Numbers can't start with zero;
Repeated digits are allowed, then:
First digit can be any of 9,
Second digit can be any of 10,
Third and fourth digits can each be any of 10;
There are therefore 9 x 10 x 10 x 10 ie 9,000 possible answers, which by coincidence is the total of the numbers from 1000 to 9999.
If howerver you did not intend to allow repeated digits then the first digit can be one of 9, the second also one of 9 (zero now allowable), the third can be one of 8 and the fourth one of 7, giving a total of 9 x 9 x 8 x 7 ie 4536 arrangements, some of which will contain the same four digits but in a different order eg 1234 and 1243. If you don't want this then divide by 24 and get a more manageable 189.
It is a way of representing the date September 9, 2009. There is no deeper meaning.
The numbers are: 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 +02 = 2 +03 = 5+04 = 9+05 = 14+06 = 20+07 = 27+08 = 35+09 = 44+10 = 54+11 = 65 or 32 and 33
.09 is 9 hundredths so it already is to the nearest hundredth.
no the square root of 9 is 3 which is rational since it can be written as 3/1. remember a rational number is any number that can be written as a/b where a and b are integers.
2 can go into 48 24 times, meaning that 48/2=24.
Assuming that 00, 01, 02, etc. count as two digit numbers, then there are one hundred (1 through 99 and including 0).If you are not allowed to count 00, 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06, 07, 08, or 09 because they simplify to one digit numbers, then you have ten less--so a total of ninety two digit numbers.
No
The Solitude of Prime Numbers was created on 2010-09-09.
If you count 00, 01 though to 09 as 2 digit numbers then you have a 19% chance...There are 100 numbers and 19 contain the number 8....08, 18, 28, 38, 48, 58, 68, 78, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 98ANOTHER ANSWERTwo digit numbers start at 10 and continue to 99. Of these 90 numbers, 18 have at least one 8 in it. That gives 18/90 = 20% chance (exactly).
No.
XII - 12IV - 04IX - 09
Yes. The zero is only acting as a place holder.
I'll get back to you on 8-5-09.
01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
You just start with seeing how many times the 2 digit number can go into the 1st 2 numbers of the 3 digit number. Then you put how many times the 2 digit number can go into the 1st 2 digits of the 3 digit number up top. It's called long division, which is basically a system of finding how many times you can take away the 2 digit number. Sometimes you can't do the first step above if the hundreds digit is too small. When that happens you just get a zero in that part of the calculation. First deal with the hundreds & tens. Look at 144 divided by 12. The leftmost 2 digits represent 14 tens. You can divide this by 12 to get 1 ten in your answer and a remainder of 2 tens left over from the original 14 tens. Add this spare 2 tens to the 4 in the units column to get 24. This is now thought of as 24 units and you can divide this by 12 to get 2 units. Total answer = 1 ten plus 2 units =12. If you try to divide 108 by 12 then the first step won't go because you can't take 12 from 10. But you simply say the answer is zero with 10 left over. Add on the next bit as above to get 108 and you find you can take 9 twelves from it and get none left. So the answer is 09, or simply 9.
45
One, this century