by asking a person or going to a school
No, the answer is not going to be a prime number. For example, 2*3=6 which is not a prime number.
It will be a number either negative, zero or positive, depending on what the two numbers you add are.
The sum of two negative numbers is going to sum up to a negative number EX:-2+-5=-7
Since you need at least two numbers to create a sum, I'm going to say "no."
Yes
To clear your body of nitrogenous wastes.
Exactly 495 times
by asking a person or going to a school
No, the answer is not going to be a prime number. For example, 2*3=6 which is not a prime number.
A Fibonacci number is one of a sequence where each number (after the first two) is made by adding the two before it. The most famous sequence begins with 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, and so on... The number sequence is 'famous' because it is found in many instances in nature, including the arrangement of seeds in the head of a sunflowers one number going clockwise and another going anticlockwise), and the 'nobbles' on a pineapple - again one number going left to right, and another going right to left.
While number three has been successful for me in the past, today I'm going to choose number two.
I'll give you a sample of how they're used in sentences. To: I am going to the shop. Two: One, Two, Three. Too: Me and a few friends are going to the cinema, I think Jimmy is going too.
It will be a number either negative, zero or positive, depending on what the two numbers you add are.
There are a countless number of major changes to the telephone. The two most major changes include going cordless and then going compact.
I am going to Harrod,s at two too.
Not if the second rational number is 0: in that case the quotient is not defined. Otherwise the answer is yes.