FoxTrot by Bill Amend for August 18, 2013
Transcript:
Marcus: The square root of 16 plus the atomic number of boron plus the number of lines in a shakespearean sonnet is: (A) 23 (B) 27 (C) 31 (D) 34. Jason: We'll take these two. Marcus: Starting the school year with smart pencils is key. Intercom: Cleanup on aisle five...
The#1BoiseStateFan over 11 years ago
Cleanup will be about half an hour……….
shadowist over 11 years ago
Too bad! It should have said “We’re gonna need a cleanup on Aisle Three”
Asharah over 11 years ago
Okay, did anyone figure the solution without resorting to Wikipedia? I had no idea what the atomic number for Boron was (5) and couldn’t remember the number of lines in a sonnet (14).
Celarius Premium Member over 11 years ago
guessed A and was right
sinfoid over 11 years ago
You can actually figure out the answer without actually knowing all the variables involved and without resorting to wikipedia, look at the last 2 panels closely!
fixer1967 over 11 years ago
This reminds of of my high school days. We had to have a calculator for algebra class. Being from a poor family my mother had to get me the cheapest one she could find. (You can get one for $1 now days). I got accused of cheating because kids with $100 calculators were failing while I was passing with a cheap ($20) one was passing. I shut my teacher up when I started to correct his mistakes in front of the whole class which was quit often.
ossiningaling over 11 years ago
82, 82, 82. 246 total.
tlynnch over 11 years ago
4 + 5 + 14 for those who a google challenged.
Doctor11 over 11 years ago
The last time those two did something like this, it involved a box full of bouncing balls, and the store went out of business because of all the injury lawsuits as a result.
vldazzle over 11 years ago
Like others, I did it the logical way and saw that only A had 2 pencils. I would have guessed wrong on both Boron and sonnet because I did not care enough to do a search.
Fun to see that even brainiacs can be superstitious!
dadoctah over 11 years ago
I’ve been able to remember the atomic number of boron ever since Bruce Willis was in that movie about it: The Fifth Element
meleedad over 11 years ago
Error. You don’t drop your pencils. It breaks the lead.
Flyingcar28 over 11 years ago
The square root of 16 is 4 and -4 so a better correct answer would have been 15 and 23
gcarlson over 11 years ago
The choices helped me remember there are only 14 lines in a Shakespearean sonnet (I’m much, MUCH more into the plays), where some have 16 – 25 wasn’t an option.
Frogman_tg over 11 years ago
They bought the TWO pencils that fell on the correct answer A: 23
JP Steve Premium Member over 11 years ago
My quirky English teacher taught us that the rhyme scheme of a sonnet ended with “GG” —“you know, like horses!”
shadowist over 11 years ago
@ K.C. Fahel Did you even get my reference?
tammyspeakslife Premium Member over 11 years ago
Drop pencils like that and you have pencils that constantly break when sharpened
calspace over 11 years ago
FlyingCar, 16^(1/2) is both -4 and 4, but sqrt(16) is 4. Roots are a function, and therefore can’t have two solutions.
I was answering a question on Yahoo! Answers math section and somebody was supposed to find the approximate values of various square roots using a method of guessing and testing. I pointed out that most of them could be solved without guessing if you knew a few square roots.
sqrt(75) = 5 * sqrt(3), and if you know that sqrt(3) = 1.723, why guess? But that comes from years of doing trig and looking up the roots and logs and such in the tables at the back of the book, which no one has to do any more, because there are sophisticated calculators.
daisyspups over 11 years ago
My local useless newspaper dropped Fox Trot inferring that it had been discontinued. I am glad to find out that it has not been discontinued.
aidan574 about 11 years ago
Eh heres my awnser:just read the read the comic _
bewisner about 11 years ago
I think that Jason and Marcus are on to something.
chris_weaver about 11 years ago
The old Random Pencil Selection Algorithm.
MacBo0kOnHead about 6 years ago
Got it in one. (A)
PBS1! almost 5 years ago
Aaaa! Teachers never expect me to memorize atomic masses! A periodic table is always given!
Ωmega almost 3 years ago
Im guessing its A….
ElaraGaming 9 months ago
No way, literally had a math test and this was the bonus problem, so I came here to see if it was a foxtrot reference.(He’s already done multiple)
R-66Y 3 days ago
That would totally break the leads