Well, It's simple! You can make a song, or study it. YOU SUCK.
Learn your multiplication tables
While the multiplication tables are sometimes attributed to Pythagoras the oldest known multiplication tables were used by the Babylonians about 4000 years ago. These used a base of 60. The oldest known tables using a base of 10 are the Chinese decimal multiplication tables on bamboo strips dating to about 305 BC, during China's Warring States period.
Because he knew His Tables! :)
There are many tricks to learning multiplication tables. One is the rhyme '8 times 8 fell on the floor and when it woke up it was 64'. Another is to know that all the nine multiplication tables add up to 9 up to 9 times 10.
Multiplication table has its origin from simple mathematical table.Mathematical tables can be traced backed to 1900 BC in the Babylonian mathematics in the clay tablets found one of the most important tablet is named as Plimpton322.Then the Greek Astronomer Hipparchus used Trignometric Tables those can be the multiplication table in some sense.Those may be the Greeks who developed multiplication tables on road around 200BC. Pythagoras.
Yes, but don't be confused by the word "tables" . Tables is an archaic word for columns or lists of things. (remember the old multiplication tables?) It is seldom used anymore except in science.
Learn your multiplication tables
time tables
While the multiplication tables are sometimes attributed to Pythagoras the oldest known multiplication tables were used by the Babylonians about 4000 years ago. These used a base of 60. The oldest known tables using a base of 10 are the Chinese decimal multiplication tables on bamboo strips dating to about 305 BC, during China's Warring States period.
When I was growing up, we had to memorize the full set of multiplication tables from 1 to 12. Multiplication Tables are standard 1 to 12 (not 1 to 100). Students must learn the times tables for 1 to 12, before they can apply those tables for 13 through to any number.You can find Multiplication Tables 1-12 online or as charts for sale. Or, do what we did as kids: make your own chart and color or decorate the chart.
It isn't necessary, nor particularly useful. Once you know the multiplication tables for one-digit numbers, you can do multiplication on paper for larger numbers. The time spent to memorize such multiplication tables for larger numbers would be better spent learning more advanced math concepts.
Very carefully.
Even
Because he knew His Tables! :)
Multiplication tables
E. B. Varian has written: 'Varian's commercial multiplication tables' -- subject(s): Multiplication, Ready-reckoners, Tables
It means to learn something by repeating it until it is memorized. For example, if you learn your multiplication tables by rote, you simply repeat the multiplication facts over and over and over until you no longer struggle to remember the answers.