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Usually not. If you do use conjectures, you should make it quite clear that the proof stands and falls with the truth of the conjecture. That is, if the conjecture happens to be false, then the proof of your statement turns out to be invalid.
A graphs shaped like me will have a very large number of turns.
If a person turns 14 in 2012, they were born in 1998 If a person turns 14 in 2013, they were born in 1999 And a person who turns 14 in 2014 was obviously born in 2000.
2.5 inches
what 4 turns can put a figure in its original positions
False
Not necessarily. Failure in an experiment can lead to new insights, refine the hypothesis, or highlight the need for adjustments. It is part of the scientific process to learn from unexpected outcomes and it can still contribute to the overall understanding of the phenomenon being studied.
No. You can use your experimental observations or do more research to formulate a new hypothesis. A hypothesis that is not supported by the experimental data, it is just simply an unsupported hypothesis.
you accept that and move on
false
Fear of failure.
i have no clue
it means what color it turns after or before the experiment
broken
true
Bagi, The monster of mighty nature
There was a rumor that Rugrats would be renewed in 2016, but it turns out it was false.