-- city blocks
-- house foundations
-- printer paper
-- computer screens
-- computer keyboards
-- office building foundations
-- CD and DVD cases
-- book covers
-- newspapers
-- mailing envelopes
-- house windows
-- walls in a room of a house
-- floor of a room in a house
-- ceiling of a room in a house
-- sides, tops, and bottoms, of boxes, cartons, and crates
-- do-it-yourself book shelves
-- doors
-- bed sheets
-- blankets
-- tables
-- tablecloths
-- notepads
a door, window, computer screen. -apex
Unless you are an electrical engineer or a math teacher, every number you will ever use in a real world situation will be a real number.
To add fractions.
Jeopardy.
to keep rythm
a door, window, computer screen. -apex
Unless you are an electrical engineer or a math teacher, every number you will ever use in a real world situation will be a real number.
Well, since there is no such thing as a sphare in the real world, it is a bit hard to tell what it can or cannot use.
use a absolute value to represent a negative number in the real world
Yes
Quadrilateral
use a absolute value to represent a negative number in the real world
you wouldn't
To add fractions.
Jeopardy.
to keep rythm
the bunnies :)