The answer can be found at http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/powerpoint/HA011327531033.aspx
A perfect square is a rational number equal to the square of a whole number.
The square root is the number which is times by itself, to get the square number.
No it is not a square number but it is very close to the square number 121.
No it is not a square number. It's square root is 18.57 rounded.
To insert a checkbox in Word using a square, go to the "Insert" tab, click on "Symbol," and choose "More Symbols." In the dialog box, select the "Wingdings" font, where you can find a square checkbox symbol (such as the empty box character). Click on the symbol to insert it into your document. Alternatively, you can use the "Developer" tab to insert a checkbox form control. If the Developer tab is not visible, enable it through Word Options under "Customize Ribbon."
I am not aware of a square key on a calculator. To get a square input number to be squared followed by multiply (X) and then = to get the answer. If it is square root your are referring to then insert the number which you want to find the square root of followed by the square root key. This brings up the required answer. Hope this helps.
Go to Insert Symbol. From there you can go through the character sets and you will find the square root symbol. You could also get it in the Character Map and then copy and paste it into Powerpoint.
Here are the steps: 1. Find the square root button, it usually located at the middle. 2. Press the square root button. 3. Insert a number. 4. Press '='. 5. You get the answer. P.S. These steps belongs to scientific calculator.
Noun: He fed the insert into the printer. Verb: He proceeded to insert the circle into the square hole not knowing that it would not fit.
To type a square root symbol in Microsoft Word, you can use the following steps: Go to the "Insert" tab, click on "Equation" in the Symbols group, and then select "Square Root" from the options provided. This will insert a square root symbol into your document.
It is a square number but not a perfect square number.
Then the number is called a "perfect square".Then the number is called a "perfect square".Then the number is called a "perfect square".Then the number is called a "perfect square".
There is no highest square number. If there was such a number then that number squared would be a higher square number!
Well, First Open PowerPoint and the make a bar down the bottom then put a square on the lower-left corner of the screen on the bar. make a new slide and the hyperlink the square to slide 2 and copy the things you have from slide 1 to slide 2 and put a up-facing rectangle on top of the square. Just keep on doing stuff and hyperlinking it and it should work!
A perfect square is a rational number equal to the square of a whole number.
The square root is the number which is times by itself, to get the square number.
No it is not a square number but it is very close to the square number 121.