33+33=66 33 +33 66
25 percent off 33 pounds = £24.7525% off of £33= 25% discount applied to £33= £33 - (25% * £33)= £33 - (0.25 * £33)= £33 - £8.25= £24.75
33%
0.0303
40% off of 33 = 19.8= 40% discount applied to 33= 33 - (40% * 33)= 33 - (0.40 * 33)= 33 - 13.2= 19.8
33 studio records, 8 live records as of 2010 anyway.
3
They stopped making 78 RPM records because they became outdated and technology was advancing. After the 78 RPM records of the 1900's, the 33 1/3 RPM records were created.
In 2014, 33 baht is equivalent to U.S. $0.03. This meager amount can only buy a candy or a piece of bubble gum.
Bob Dylan, Frank Sinatra, and George Strait all have 33 gold records, and there are a few others with more than that
The 1971-72 Lakers won 33 in a row.
He holds the record for most points in a single quarter,33.
They were all on 33 rpm records. In that era, the vinyl record was the latest, most accurate rendition of audio available. CDs and MP3s were not invented at that time.
it depends on where you buy it, and who you buy it from.
If something is on sale as three for one dollar, you can usually buy one of the items for 33 cents. Toys in gumball machines are sometimes priced at 25 cents.
The value of old Moms Mabley 33 1/3 RPM records in excellent condition will depend on who is buying them. A collector of this type of record might pay $10 or more per album. The price of vintage items usually depends on what a buyer is willing to pay.
The 45 RPM records or vinyls sound as they were intended to sound when played at 45 revolutions per minute (at the 45 setting on a record player) while the 33 RPM records sound right at the 33 revolutions per minute speed. Then, there is the issue of size. Records that are 33 RPM are larger in diameter than 45's. Also 33's can hold more songs than 45's do. Usually, 45's have only one song on a side and were used as demo records for radio stations (yes, radio stations used to play music on records before they went to tapes and now to digital music on computers) and for releasing "singles" so that people could listen to a new band without having to pay for a whole album. 45 RPM records or vinyls are recorded at 45 revolutions per minute and are consequently played back at the same speed to achieve exact replication of the original recording. Subsequently, 33 1/3 RPMs are recorded at that speed, and played back at that speed to hear the audio as it was recorded. Generally 45s are recorded on smaller 7" disks, whereas 33 1/3s are recorded on larger, full sized 12" disks. This is not always the case, as some 12" records are recorded at 45 RPM for higher, or audiophile, sound quality.