How about: (3 squared minus 2 cubed) + 1 to the fourth
3 cubed minus 5 squared
log 100
Kim Basinger's weeks minus Doris Day's cents.
The top number is 3. The next two numbers are 4 and 5. The last ones are 2, 6, and 1.
bloody tricky
Finding one is the tricky part. The other one is just the negative of the first. It's a little involved to go into here. See the related links for details.
A binary number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is two times that of the digit to its right.Similarly, a decimal number is simply a way of representing a number in such a way that the place value of each digit is ten times that of the digit to its right.
The number is given to only one decimal place so you cannot round it to two places. The number could have had any value in the range [0.55 to 0.65] and you have no way of knowing what it was so no way of representing the number to two decimal places.
I don't know this awnser is tricky
It is tricky
uhh.. that's a real tricky one bit the answer is 184
One way to increase the number of stars in a galaxy is for the two galaxies to collide.
A tricky one you can fly if you have fly or run all the way there
20
tricky is skill dog
Because it's much, much easier to design electronic two-way switches that electronic ten-way switches. A two-way switch leads to binary.
Perhaps sly and fly, or slick and tick.
You first have to figure out some rule for the sequence. This can be quite tricky.
Tricky little question. If you mean what places in the sequence of Presidents were occupied by someone named George Bush, it is correct as it stands except that "which" should be "what" and President should be in the singular. The answer, of course, is "41 and 43." If you mean "How many Presidents were George Bush" say it that way. The answer is "Two."
That depends. If any number multiplied by 0 is equal to 0, then is 0 a multiple of no numbers, or every number... a tricky one.