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Ten minutes to nine in a digital clock would be displayed as 8:50. This is because each hour on a digital clock is divided into 60 minutes, with each minute represented by a number from 00 to 59. So, when it is ten minutes before 9:00, the minute hand would be pointing at the 10th minute mark, which is 50 minutes past the hour.
7:40
Ah, a quarter past four in the afternoon on a twenty-four-hour digital clock would be displayed as 16:15. Just imagine the clock as a canvas, with the hour hand pointing to the 16 for 4 o'clock, and the minute hand at the 3 for a quarter past. Isn't telling time like painting a beautiful picture?
To determine how many times the clock will display 3 or more of the same number in a row over the course of one day, we need to consider the different combinations that can occur. In a 12-hour clock, there are 24 hours in a day. Each hour can display two sets of three repeating numbers (e.g., 1:11 and 11:11). Therefore, there are 48 instances of three repeating numbers in a 12-hour period. Doubling this for a full 24-hour day, we find that the clock will display 3 or more of the same number in a row 96 times in one day.
5 times
No, they are not.
i think its 17
Four.
An analog clock is correct twice a day (AM and PM display the same times). A military clock (0000 to 2400 hours) is only correct once.
34
Twice, at 10 past 2 and quarter past 3.
The number one appears 5 times on a 12 hour clock face. One, ten, eleven (twice) and twelve o'clock.
If you're looking at a digital clock, the reading remains the same if you flip it vertically because the numbers are symmetrical and appear the same upside down. However, if it's an analog clock, the hands will appear to be in reverse, but the time remains the same due to the circular nature of the clock face.
9:59, 10:01
If you have read How Pendulum Clocks Work, you know that all clocks (regardless of technology) have a few required components:A source of power to run the clockIn a pendulum clock, the weights or the springs handle this role.An accurate timebase that acts as the clock's heartbeatIn a pendulum clock, the pendulum and escapement handle this role.A way to gear down the timebase to extract different components of time (hours, minutes, seconds) In a pendulum clock, gears serve this role.A way to display the timeIn a pendulum clock, the hands and face serve this role.A digital clock is no different. It simply handles these functions electronically rather than mechanically. So in a digital clock, there is an electrical power supply (either a battery or 120-volt AC power from the wall). There is an electronic timebase that "ticks" at some known and accurate rate. There is an electronic "gearing mechanism" of some sort -- generally a digital clock handles gearing with a component called a "counter." And there is a display, usually either LEDs (light emitting diodes) or an LCD (liquid crystal display).
There is no such thing as 'analog time'. Time is measured the same way whether you use an analog or digital clock. An analog clock is represented as a circle, with 'hands' on its face that point to different numbers to tell the time. A digital clock is simply a set of numbers, usually accompanied by 'AM' or 'PM' to denote day or night. For instance: 9:42 PM