You can't take three from two,
Two is less than three,
So you look at the four in the tens place.
Now that's really four tens,
So you make it three tens,
Regroup, and you change a ten to ten ones,
And you add them to the two and get twelve,
And you take away three, that's nine.
Is that clear?
DeltaWingDragon
So do I! When I saw that 9 stealing a 1 and becoming a 10, I thought "Wait... These are electrons. This is chemistry. That 9 is a halogen!"
Jesse, we need to cook!
Closely related to that:
JD Vance, is that you?
- "Gentlemen, your verdict" by Michael Bruce - trolley problem on a submarine (attention: weird vertical formatting)
- "Just Lather, That's All" by Hernando Téllez" - a barber during a civil war
The second one actually gave me half of a mental breakdown, but not because it was too violent for me.
One analysis that I read made the exact opposite conclusion that I made, and it showed me this: in the subject of English, two diametrically opposed points can both be equally correct! Nothing is fixed! Reality is mutable!
Also The Lottery, The Veldt, Harrison Bergeron (which others have already mentioned)
Could have just said man instead of ma'am. They sound almost the same.
Was this article generated by AI?
You mean general dynamics?
Those forward wing things are called canards. 3 modern fighters have them.
- Saab Gripen: grey, delta wings, single engine, rectangular side intakes.
- Dassault Rafale: grey, delta wings, twin engine, round side intakes and fixed fuel probe. Only fighter known to defeat the F-22 in simulated combat.
- Eurofighter Typhoon: grey, delta wings, twin engine, rectangular lower intakes.
Is this like the Stalin sort?