Each of them is precisely equal to the other.
divide the circumference by pie (3.14) and the answer would be the radius. for example circumference = 314 pie = 3.14 so 314 divide by 3.14 = 100 so the radius = 100
Yes, ALWAYS. Think of it this way... If you had 1/2 a pie and you wanted just a FRACTION of it, that's less than the 1/2 you started with.
50g
Technically, the true value of pi is larger than 3.14 (3.14159...) so any value of pi more precise than two decimal places will be bigger than your version of pi which equals 3.14000... As for pie, there's no limit to how large a pie one can bake
Because the early settlers had an abundunce of pumpkins and less access to apples at that time of the year, therefor the pumpkin pie was more popular.
Each of them is precisely equal to the other.
divide the circumference by pie (3.14) and the answer would be the radius. for example circumference = 314 pie = 3.14 so 314 divide by 3.14 = 100 so the radius = 100
It depends on the pie chart. It may not have any numbers less than 4, or all of them.
Any number greater than 0 and less than 3.14
Only if Pie weighs less than the man that's trying to kill it
If I ask you if you want a half a pie or a third of a pie, I hope you will grab the half.
It depends on what size it is.
Picture it in your mind. One whole pie. One half is half a pie, right? Is 1/5th of a pie more than 1/2 a pie? Or is it less? The answer is between zero and one half.
Ice is less dense than water so it floats. ex. ice is more dense than ethanol so it sinks.
If a circle fraction can, a pie can yes
3/4 is larger than 5/6, imagine that there are 4 pieces of pie and 6 pieces of pie, the 4 pieces of pie are bigger than 1 piece of the 6 pieces of pie. So the difference would be less.