Frazz by Jef Mallett for October 21, 2012
Transcript:
46x7 MOST LIKELY 3 pounds = ___ ounces CANNOT PREDICT NOW (a) (b) (c) Which one is a rhombus? VERY DOUBTFUL (12x9) = (9x___?) IT'S DECIDEDLY SO Frazz: She is not going to accept that came from a magic 8-ball. Caulfield: Don't be so sure. I bought it at her garage sale.
chireef about 12 years ago
do you think the colorist had a bad day? i can’t read any of the answers
KasparV about 12 years ago
Legible to me.1. Most likely,2. Cannot predict now3. Very doubtful4. It’s decidedly so
ReneTray about 12 years ago
Thank you.
ReneTray about 12 years ago
The answers that he refuses to answer are #1 “322”, #2 “48”, #3 “c”, #4 “12”. The last one the answer was already given.
And the “answer” to this latest example probably needs an “old fashion” answer so he will do the assigned tasks.
Varnes about 12 years ago
Put him on a couple trains traveling between Detroit and Chicago…The one from Detroit is going 70 mph, the other is going 90 mph……How much sooner will the faster one alive? That should shut ’im up
Storm F-1/4 about 12 years ago
People. It’s still morning. Math? My brain is going to explode.
brick10 about 12 years ago
@Alexikakos Most mathematicians consider a square to be a rhombus, this being the more inclusive definition.
Can be solved by use of the Commutative property:a*b=b*aNo calculations are requiredvwdualnomand about 12 years ago
wish more kids were interested with math, instead of shiny vampires and bdsm shades of gray.
Pedrocelli almost 12 years ago
@Strod – no, c) is not a parallelogram. The left and right hand sides are not parallel, so it is not a rhombus.
When I studied maths a rhombus was always a quadrilateral with four equal sides – never any mention of any restriction on the angles. This is the first time I’ve ever seen that definition. In fact one of the definitions of a square was a rhombus with four right angles. The other was a rectangle with equal sides, so a square is both.