MedVision ad

weirdo question (1 Viewer)

lpodnano

5eva alone
Joined
Mar 6, 2008
Messages
1,561
Location
;)
Gender
Female
HSC
2011
awesome question. it sure worked my brains out.:jaw:
 

kwabon

Banned
Joined
May 26, 2008
Messages
646
Location
right behind you, mate
Gender
Male
HSC
2009
fark sorry, by the time i wrote the first letter of my question, i figured what i did wrong and i stupidly clicked enter, and was like, "oh fark".

epic fail thread by me, mods please delete, unless bosers want to do some shit here. ;)
 

Aquawhite

Retiring
Joined
Jul 14, 2008
Messages
4,946
Location
Gold Coast
Gender
Male
HSC
2010
Uni Grad
2013
ah, this is going to transfer into the most epic thread on BoS... der... -_-

and clearly the answer was x^2.y+z not xyz... farrout.
 

Aquawhite

Retiring
Joined
Jul 14, 2008
Messages
4,946
Location
Gold Coast
Gender
Male
HSC
2010
Uni Grad
2013
Hey, this is a really hard question. Don't think it's that easy to solve! lmao.
 

Dragonmaster262

Unorthodox top student
Joined
Jan 1, 2009
Messages
1,386
Location
Planet Earth
Gender
Male
HSC
2010
fark sorry, by the time i wrote the first letter of my question, i figured what i did wrong and i stupidly clicked enter, and was like, "oh fark".

epic fail thread by me, mods please delete, unless bosers want to do some shit here. ;)
You can delete it yourself with thread tools.
 

Absolutezero

real human bean
Joined
Nov 17, 2007
Messages
15,077
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
I guess it depends on your construction of w

if w = v x v

then,

w = vv

Thus,

w = v^2

is correct. :)
 

kaz1

et tu
Joined
Mar 6, 2007
Messages
6,960
Location
Vespucci Beach
Gender
Undisclosed
HSC
2009
Uni Grad
2018
I guess it depends on your construction of w

if w = v x v

then,

w = vv

Thus,

w = v^2

is correct. :)
I always wondered why English speaking people don't call w "double v" as it looks more like two v's rather than two u's.
 

Absolutezero

real human bean
Joined
Nov 17, 2007
Messages
15,077
Gender
Male
HSC
N/A
It has to do with the vowel sounds. With the development of latin, v did not represent the appropriate tone of the sound. Or something like that. I'm sure you could wikipedia it to find a better definition. :)
 

Brontecat

Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2008
Messages
784
Location
where i live
Gender
Female
HSC
2010
W
"The earliest form of the letter W was a doubled V used in the 7th century by the earliest writers of Old English; it is from this <uu> digraph that the modern name "double U" comes. This digraph was not extensively used, as its sound was usually represented instead by the runic wynn (Ƿ), but W gained popularity after the Norman Conquest, and by 1300 it had taken wynn's place in common use. Other forms of the letter were a pair of Vs whose branches cross in the middle. An obsolete, cursive form found in the nineteenth century in both English and German was in the form of an "n" whose rightmost branch curved around as in a cursive "v" (compare the shape of ƕ).

The sounds /w/ (spelled with U/V) and /b/ (spelled B) of Classical Latin developed into a bilabial fricative /β/ between vowels, in Early Medieval Latin. Therefore, V no longer represented adequately the labial-velar approximant sound /w/ of Old High German. In later German, this phoneme /w/ became /v/; this is why German W represents that sound. In Dutch, it became a labiodental approximant /ʋ/ (with the exception of words with EEUW, which have /eːβ/), or other diphthongs containing -uw. However, in many Dutch speaking areas, such as Flanders and Suriname the /β/ pronunciation is used at all times.

The ancient Phoenician letter shin had a W shape; the sounds and histories of the two letters, however, are entirely unrelated—shin represented /ʃ/ or /s/, and developed into the Latin alphabet S."

... the correct answer according to wikipedia :)
 

-Ego

New Member
Joined
Jun 23, 2009
Messages
6
Gender
Male
HSC
2010
wikipedia cannot be trusted.

then again....
 

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Users: 0, Guests: 1)

Top