Lu Chao from China is the recognized Guinness record holder for reciting digits of Pi. He successfully recited 67,890 digits of pi in 24 hours and 4 minutes with an error at the 67,891st digit, saying it was a "5", when it was actually a "0".
a pie
When you recite something you simply speak it out loud, whether it is a poem or a speech or something else. Recounting something is recollecting out loud something that has actually happened to yourself.
You look at the lines say them out loud while looking at them. then give the book to an adult and have them look at it while you recite it, ans see if you get it right. Another way is writing them out over and over again. Or break them up into parts, and either say them over and over again, or write them over and over. Then you should recite it to family/friends, and see if its right or not. When you recite it to family/friends, you should give them the script so you can see if you have memorized it or not.
you can recite words by looking them up on the internet{dictionary.com} or look them up in a Websters dictionary
How long would it take ypu to repeat/recite 50 billion digits or more.
No. Recite is a verb. It cannot be a preposition.
three.
to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
The word 'recite' is a verb (recite, recites, reciting, recited).The noun forms for the verb to recite are reciter, recital,recitation, and the gerund, reciting.
prefix 're' means again recite means to repeat the words of
It depends, some can recite up to 100-1000 digits, but I can go up to 40-50
In 1995 a Japanese man, Akira Haraguchi, 59, managed to recite pi's first 83,431 decimal places,setting the world record.But this could be old though.
I'm guessing that you couldn't do it in your lifetime, especially since you would have to memorize them first before you could recite them, assuming you weren't allowed to read them.
Submit your record attempt to www.recordholdersrepublic.co.uk
to recite pi without taking any breaks would take forever. This is because pi is a number that never stops, and goes on forever. Pi=3.14159265..., but goes on longer and longer. Pi is normally rounded to: 3.14 ================================== How far you get depends on how fast you recite, which you didn't mention. Let's say you could recite two digits every second without a break, and still figure out some way to eat and breathe. You would recite 172,800 in a day, 63,115,200 in a year, and 5,049,216,000 in 80 years. In 2005, a supercomputer team in Japan announced that they had tabulated (pi) out to 1,241 billion decimal digits ... a little over 245 times what you recited in eighty years, or roughly 19,662 years at 2 per second. But it's a race you can't win. In the next 19,662 years, the number of known digits will be many times what it is today.
The present tense of read is:I/You/We/They read.He/She/It reads.The present participle is reading.