Some synonyms for figure out are: Figure add up get it/got it it clicked/trying to make it click making sense of it
You have to figure that out! Variables, in math, are there because you need to find them and figure the problem out. Usually, on the side it tells you what the variables mean, or you have to find that variable by making the equation make sense if they give u the answer.
Yes "I know you are but what am I" does make sense. When some people ask others if this makes sense well it does.
cubed units
yes it is because if you just said a round it does not make sense, but if you say it together it does make sense.
try to figure out what they're saying
"you" is not a number and so the question does not make sense.
that doesn't make sense. At least not to me...
Some synonyms for figure out are: Figure add up get it/got it it clicked/trying to make it click making sense of it
It's about 25 degrees. If this answer doesn't make any sense to you, it's because the question didn't make a great deal of sense to us. The 25 degree figure is correct, though.
You have to figure that out! Variables, in math, are there because you need to find them and figure the problem out. Usually, on the side it tells you what the variables mean, or you have to find that variable by making the equation make sense if they give u the answer.
That isn't a proper number MCM is 1900 DC would be 600 and then D would be 500 which doesn't make sense.
You really can't most of the time. The whole thing about idioms is that they make no sense if you try to figure them out literally.
Actually, it does! If you don't make sense, people... won't understand you! So, it does make a BUNCH of sense to make sense, LOL! (Do not, ever, ask a question like this! It seriously makes NO sense!)
one syllable is in the word range, to figure it out try clapping out the syllables, so you can see how many claps make sense in that word.
frist that does not make sense and to figure out what a adverb isnt is to think of what a adverb is so a adverb is what somthing did for example my new dog was JUMPING and RUNNING.
Homophones are a pair of words pronounced the same way but having different meanings or spellings, or both.Figure, in the sense of 'amount of money' and figure in the sense of a 'nonliteral part of speech', are homophones.Some other meanings - homophones - for figure are:model (he made the figure of a cross from twigs)sum, total (the final figure came to twenty dollars)impression (of a person: he was a figure of fun)set of movements (figure-skating)