Go to Insert Symbol. From there you can go through the character sets and you will find the square root symbol. You could also get it in the Character Map and then copy and paste it into Powerpoint.
To type a square root symbol in Microsoft Word, you can use the following steps: Go to the "Insert" tab, click on "Equation" in the Symbols group, and then select "Square Root" from the options provided. This will insert a square root symbol into your document.
To type the square root symbol on ypur keyboard press and hold alt and type 251.
alt 251 on the keypad
please rephrase your question ... what does "and" mean in your problem? type it out the way it appears and if you can't make a square root symbol, just type sqrt(7) or whatever it is you're trying to take the square root of.
Use the equation editor, to make your equations look better. Note that this is designed to write the equations and symbols, not to solve them. Select "Insert", then "Object", then "Object" again. Under "Type", choose "Microsoft Equation 3.0". This equation editor has capabilities to show square roots, other roots, integrals, fractions, and many other options.
√12127 = 110.122658885 On a calculator, first click on the key marked with the square root symbol: √ Then type 12127 and click on the = key to see the answer.
Assuming you mean to type the √ symbol, I would guess (not using MS Word but OpenOffice.Org) that it is inserted as a "special symbol" (in one of the menus) which could allow access to all characters in the current font.
The answer is: radical 99. I can't type the square-root symbol, but that is what you use. It's something like this: ____ \/ 99 This is radical 99.
35.0713558335 The easiest method is to use a calculator: first press the key marked with a √ (square root symbol) then type in the number 1230 and press enter.
This square root symbol √ was inserted as a special character in a word processing program, and copied and then pasted into this answer. Another example is √25 = 5 copied and pasted from a calculator.In Ubuntu: press control, shift and U at the same time and release, then type 221a and tap the space bar and √ appears.
Oh, dude, it's like super easy. You just press the square root button on your calculator, type in the number you want the square root of, and voila! The calculator does the math for you. It's like magic, but with numbers.
The radical symbol √ (with a line over what you're taking a root of) denotes root.The symbol without any other numbers, means square root, while with a number like 3√ means take cube root, 4√ fourth root, etc.If you want to type this symbol in Windows, hold down the key on the keyboard, then type (on the number pad) 251, then let go of the key.You can also denote roots by fractional exponents: 1/2 power is the square root,1/3 power is the cube root, etc and this works if you have an xy (exponentiation)key on your calculator and want to compute roots.The symbol used to make a root is √