Most people do not use it in their daily lives.
You and I use it every day, and have done all our lives.
The question is broad enough to be the topic of an entire book. Let's just say adults, knowingly or not, use math every day of their lives.
For example, you use it every time you do a multiplication. For example, in the following multiplication: 13 x 2 --- 26 Actually 13 is being split into two parts, 10 + 3, and then the distributive property is applied.
In Billing
Most people do not use it in their daily lives.
Children can use multiplication in their daily lives in a number of creative ways. A child can calculate how many times they eat in a week for fun for example.
because we use it every day in our lives!
science is in our every day lives...we use it in our every work every time..
Neptunium has not today any use in every day life.
You and I use it every day, and have done all our lives.
The answer is to use every day appliances with the help of light. It would help us with our every day lives to do stuff we would normally need light to do, like to surf the web, make food with stoves and more.
Science discovers natural phenomena that engineering can use to create the many technologies that we depend on every day.
We use gases every day in our lives. The gases that we use are air, natural gas, oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and water vapor.
iPod systems retain their value because every year they have new updates and every day they have new apps that people can experience and use in their everyday lives.
The answer to a multiplication question is called the "Product".
You probably use metric and imperial in your every day life.