Social Security numbers were first issued by the Social Security Administration in November 1935, more than 2400 years after Pythagoras died.
To assess the number of significant digits in a number, you first have to find the greatest non-zero digit. In this case it is the first five which represent 500. The next step is to simply count how many digits there are after this number. In this case, there are 4 more digits. Thus the number 500.95 has been given to 5 significant digits.
The security code on any credit card would be the last set of digits on back of the card with is the three digit number
Three: The first two zeros are not significant digits.
Normally a 2-digit number refers to an integer with two digits, the first of which is not 0. So the answer would be NO> But it is a number with 2 significant digits.
Virginia
TEXAS
No, because many people have the same last 4 digits of their Social Security Number, so the last 4 digits don't identify one particular person. The first 3 digits of your Social Security Number identify the region, state and city of where you applied for and received your Social Security card, and therefore (in the USA) all 9 digits would be necessary to identify any one person for a credit application.
By comparing the first three digits of the Social Security Number you can identify the state in which the subject resided at the time the number was issued.627-645 Texas449-467 Texas
There is no specific state that corresponds to a Social Security number starting with 147. The first three digits of a Social Security number indicate the location where it was issued, but they do not correspond to a specific state. Social Security numbers are issued by the Social Security Administration (SSA) and are not tied to a particular geographic location.
The "lowest" social security number (001-01-0001) was the one issued to Grace D. Owen of Concord, New Hampshire the first three digits of social security numbers are used as identifiers for where a person was born
New York
As an arithmetic expression 199-65-11 = 123 It could also be the first 7 digits of a social security number, missing the last two digits.
It appears to be a social security number. I would guess it was issued in the state of Pennsylvania around 40 years ago or so. The first three digits designate a number assigned regionally -- western Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh area. The middle number is a sorting or group number. And the final four digits identify a specific individual within the sorting group.
Social Security Card issued in California.
A social security number with the first 3 digits being 542 was issued originally in the state of Oregon. Numbers are sometimes recycled due to infant mortality or death occurring long ago.
The first person to receive a social security number is actually unknown. See Related Links.