4.5 * 16 = 72
If you fold a piece of paper in half 4 times, there will be 16 sections. Each time you fold the paper in half, the number of sections doubles. So, if you start with 1 section and fold it in half 4 times, you will end up with 16 sections.
½ × 14 × 16 = (½ × 14) × 16 = 7 × 16 = 112.
Well, isn't that a happy little question! A quarter of 16 is like cutting a cake into 4 equal pieces, so each piece would be 4. And a half of 16 is like cutting the cake in half, so you'd have 8. Just remember, math is like painting a beautiful landscape - it's all about breaking things down into smaller, manageable parts.
You take the square root. sqrt(16) = 4 and 42 = 16 -- Half it... eg. 16 / 2 = 8, then half again... eg. 8 / 2 = 4 -- Divide by 4.
If we let the imaginary number be represented as ( i ), then the equation ( 4 \times i \times 4 \times i ) simplifies to ( 16 \times i^2 ). Since ( i^2 = -1 ), this further simplifies to ( 16 \times (-1) = -16 ). Therefore, the statement ( 4 \times i \times 4 \times i = 16 ) is not correct; instead, it equals (-16).
If you fold a piece of paper in half 4 times, there will be 16 sections. Each time you fold the paper in half, the number of sections doubles. So, if you start with 1 section and fold it in half 4 times, you will end up with 16 sections.
One half time sixteen is eight.
The answer is 16.
½ × 14 × 16 = (½ × 14) × 16 = 7 × 16 = 112.
4 goes into 64 exactly 16 times
Well, isn't that a happy little question! A quarter of 16 is like cutting a cake into 4 equal pieces, so each piece would be 4. And a half of 16 is like cutting the cake in half, so you'd have 8. Just remember, math is like painting a beautiful landscape - it's all about breaking things down into smaller, manageable parts.
16 to the 4th power, or 16 x 16 x 16 x 16 = 65,536
Cos -4 times 4 = -16
You take the square root. sqrt(16) = 4 and 42 = 16 -- Half it... eg. 16 / 2 = 8, then half again... eg. 8 / 2 = 4 -- Divide by 4.
64 or 4 times 4 = 16 4 times 16= 64
It is 1/2 times 16 = 8
4 x 4 = 16