they mean that they are numbers of or to pertaining to the numbers on the product. Identifiers.
Negative numbers means
Prime numbers are numbers with only two factors. Composite numbers are numbers with more than two factors.
If you mean larger by "the set of whole numbers strictly contains the set of natural numbers", then yes, but if you mean "the set of whole numbers has a larger cardinality (size) than the set of natural numbers", then no, they have the same size.
Yes, the mean can be a decimal because the mean is a+b+c+d+(the numbers)....=e(the sum of the numbers), then e/(the quantity of numbers added together to get e)=f(the mean). Sometimes the sum may not go into the quantity in a whole number, which gives you a decimal.
curling is dangerous because the rock can slide o you foot and you can trip on the rock as your curling
It is called curling , the curling ROCK and you throw it at HOUSES the end of the curling rink
If you mean 'curling (your hair)': Are you curling tonight = Ensortijas anoche? If you mean the game of curling (on ice), there is no Spanish equivalent, so you'd have to say: Juegas a 'curling' anoche = Are you playing at 'curling' tonight?
granite
geting hit by a curling rock fallinf and cracking your head open. trip other people.
No its just throwing a rock and sweeping
it makes rocks for curling
You use brooms which you brush in front of the rock to direct it.
"Shot rock" is the term for the rock that is currently the closest to the center (the "pin") of the scoring area (the "house").
"Curling shoes," one with a slippery Teflon slider built into the sole and the other with just grippy rubber on the bottom, are used to allow players to slide smoothly down the ice during their delivery (sliding) of the curling rock. "Curling brooms" or "curling brushes" are used to "sweep" the ice in front of the rock, decreasing the friction between the rock and the ice and making the rock go both farther, and curl (curve) less if so desired. Brooms are also used by most players during their delivery for balance. Many teams will use stop watches to time a rock between certain points on the ice, to get an idea of how fast the rock is moving.
This won't do anything, because you're not affecting the ice in the rock's path.
Friction can slow down the rock