The country that has the highest rate of people that cannot read/write is:
Burkina Faso, with only a 21.8% literacy rate, or 79.2% illiteracy rate. 2003 est.
Not in my country - it depends upon local agreements.
Illiterate
A quadrillion - is the number 1... followed by either 18 or 30 zeroes - depending on your country's definition.
Plus, country code, area code, number For example: +1 555 1234567
No but it can be a square number because 1*1 = 1
It is Saudi Arabia
1 is the country code of the US. If you are outside of the US, you must dial 1 before any number to reach any number within the US. Every country has a different country code that you add to the beginning of a number in that country to dial a number in that country.
28%
The illiterate man struggled to read the instructions on the packaging.
It is estimated that around 32 million adults in the United States are functionally illiterate, which can impact their ability to read and write at a basic level. However, specific data on the number of illiterate children in the US is not readily available.
Not by any standard. Argentina has a very high literacy rate of around 95% - 97%
illiterate in spanish is analfabeto
il-literate (illiterate)
Illiterate.
It is often assumed that people who are illiterate, unable to read and write, are not very smart; this is a fallacy. There are many reasons that a person may be illiterate, such as physical, social, or learning disabilities not related to intelligence. Some people settling in a country that does not use their native language may have extreme difficulty learning the language of their new home, especially adults, and appear to be illiterate even if they learn to speak the new language but are literate in their native language. The girl was musicly illiterate.
Illiterate
Illiterate is usually an adjective, and in this sense does not have a plural form. The noun for illiterate is illiteracy, for which the plural can be illiteracies, but it is awkward. Illiterate is sometimes used as a noun to describe an illiterate person, in which case the plural would be illiterates, e.g. as in the insult, "You are a bunch of illiterates!"