onetrack Posted Friday at 12:29 PM Posted Friday at 12:29 PM Just under 100% - and they're right - she'll never finish it, using that technique. 1
pmccarthy Posted Friday at 08:25 PM Posted Friday at 08:25 PM I'm stuck on the high fives. Can someone explain how ten is correct?
octave Posted Friday at 10:14 PM Posted Friday at 10:14 PM 1 hour ago, pmccarthy said: I'm stuck on the high fives. Can someone explain how ten is correct? The important information is that each child can high-five each child ONCE. Child 1 high-fives 4 children, the second can't high-five the first child because they have already done it, the Second child high-fives child 3, 4 and 5, the third high-fives child 4 and 5, etc. We get 4+3+2+1 1 1
red750 Posted Friday at 11:39 PM Author Posted Friday at 11:39 PM Correct. Clue in the question - "members of the One family."
red750 Posted yesterday at 03:22 AM Author Posted yesterday at 03:22 AM 45 minutes ago, facthunter said: RTFQ. Nev Eh???
facthunter Posted yesterday at 06:06 AM Posted yesterday at 06:06 AM Advice in any exam. Read the question fully. Nev
Jerry_Atrick Posted yesterday at 08:59 AM Posted yesterday at 08:59 AM (edited) 9 hours ago, red750 said: Correct. Clue in the question - "members of the One family." Hmmm.. There is no answer as it is infininte. For example, negative ten is lowe number after one that begins with the last letter of the number preceding it (on the number scale). And they keep going lower than that for negative infinite. If they wanted te next positive number after one, then they should have said that, or at least said "the lowest number above one..." Nice trick question. Edited yesterday at 09:03 AM by Jerry_Atrick
red750 Posted yesterday at 09:16 AM Author Posted yesterday at 09:16 AM To an average Joe sitinng in a TV studio audience with thirty seconds to answer wouldn't overthink it to that degree. It says "after ONE". Most people would think positive numbers, one two three etc. It's not hard. The answer is Nineteen, follows eighteeN. You could do it on your fingers.
Jerry_Atrick Posted yesterday at 09:48 AM Posted yesterday at 09:48 AM 29 minutes ago, red750 said: To an average Joe sitinng in a TV studio audience with thirty seconds to answer wouldn't overthink it to that degree. It says "after ONE". Most people would think positive numbers, one two three etc. Yes, I understand that... These are more designed to test how you act under pressure... The problem is I read the lowest and immediately thought imposiible.. Double checked the question text, figured they meant above, but, hey, it's fun to find the real answer to the question.
Marty_d Posted yesterday at 12:19 PM Posted yesterday at 12:19 PM 3 hours ago, red750 said: To an average Joe sitinng in a TV studio audience with thirty seconds to answer wouldn't overthink it to that degree. It says "after ONE". Most people would think positive numbers, one two three etc. It's not hard. The answer is Nineteen, follows eighteeN. You could do it on your fingers. Lost in translation 2
red750 Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago Correct again Peter/ A few more Wheel of Fortune. (1% Club has been playing repeats.)
red750 Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago Correct Peter. I don;t know where Nev dreamt his answer up.
Marty_d Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago I want to say "cheapskate" but it confuses me that an A is already out, so if it was that both A's should be showing.
red750 Posted 6 hours ago Author Posted 6 hours ago Throughout the show, they play what they call toss-up rounds for a prize of $2000. In these rounds, the wheel is not spun, the three contestants each hold a buzzer. Letters are randomly displayed across the puzzle one at a time. When a contestant thinks they have identified the solution they press their buzzer which halts the game. If they are correct, they get the $2000 added to their total, if not the game resumes. So in a toss-up round, a letter that appears more than once in a solution may only be shown once, and will display as the game proceeds. So you are right Marty. The solution is CHEAPSKATE. 1
onetrack Posted 55 minutes ago Posted 55 minutes ago What modern nursing pioneer also developed the polar area diagram? (the polar area diagram is similar to a pie chart, but more intricate).
Jerry_Atrick Posted 28 minutes ago Posted 28 minutes ago 6 hours ago, red750 said: Throughout the show, they play what they call toss-up rounds for a prize of $2000. In these rounds, the wheel is not spun, the three contestants each hold a buzzer. Letters are randomly displayed across the puzzle one at a time. When a contestant thinks they have identified the solution they press their buzzer which halts the game. If they are correct, they get the $2000 added to their total, if not the game resumes. So in a toss-up round, a letter that appears more than once in a solution may only be shown once, and will display as the game proceeds. So you are right Marty. The solution is CHEAPSKATE. A Juicy Burger? 26 minutes ago, onetrack said: What modern nursing pioneer also developed the polar area diagram? Ol' Flo Nigthingale, I guess?
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now