π€π€πΈ POP QUIZ: Put Your Answer In The Comments. If You Know This Question, Please Do Not Answer or Comment. I Will Post The Answer Later Tonight. π€π€πΈ
(media.greatawakening.win)
π§Mental/Physical Health ππΌββοΈ
Comments (45)
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The important answer is how does the smaller circle FEEL about the bigger one. Itβs racist to expect the correct answer.
And the OD Wins!!! (as it should be)
And once again ALL was "Right" with the world.
Easy.
Both circumferences have the factors 2 x pi in them, so that is not necessary to consider in a proportional ratio. (Cross out common denominators).
Given that a circumference = 2 x pi x r, the only proportions we need to worry about are the radii.
The ratio of the radii is 3:1. Therefore the circumferences will be 3:1. The first circle needs to go round the bigger circle 3 times.
Note there is a trap, in the answer that is 9. This is for people who confuse 2 x pi x r for pi x r-squared (to give Area), which would result in 3 x 3 = 9.
Edit: Ooops I did not see your request to not comment if you knew the answer.
Many people think 3 is the right answer. They may be right. But, they may also be wrong.
8.9
Iβm changing my unsolicited answer to 1, although not an option. Last sentence is a trick.
It is 3 from the circle's perspective, 4 from the observer's perspective
Sadness is correct - making the assumption that circle B is static and cannot move freely about its axis then the answer will be 3. If circle B does move counterclockwise, AND I make the assumption that there is sufficient rolling friction between the two circles to eliminate any βslip differentialβ then the answer will be 3/2. What if circle B spins freely but circle A is static then β0β to infinity satisfies as circle Aβs center starting position will always be satisfied. βIfβ A simply turns/slips against B once again 0 to infinity satisfies the desired outcome. If I assume varied slip differentials then I can pretty much come up with any answer I would like. Given this knowledge I will answer there is NOT ENOuGH information to solve with 100% certainty without making an ass out of both you and me.!
Thanks for the reply fren! I posted the answer video and it offers some interesting insights. Be sure to check it out.
Correct for all the right reasons.
For the teens and 20 somethings it would serve better to ask, If it cost $6 and i give you a ten, what is my change? I assure you most do Not know.
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4 buckos!
I went to my 7th grade Granddaughter's softball game this summer and there were two 8th grade girls collecting the gate. This was the exact outcome and i had to tell them the change was $4 because they had No clue and this is a Prep school. It was both funny and sad.
Prepping for what exactly, I wonder... Sigh. HOME SCHOOL!!
It depends on perspective and how a revolution is defined.
So many times on tests I wanted to writeβ¦β.it dependsβ¦.how do you define βxyzβ.β
Okay, I think it's time to share the answer.
I know I went out on a limb by posting this quiz, as it doesn't appear to be Q-related, but I have an easy answer for that. It was question 17, so BQQM!
In all seriousness though, this was question 17 on the 1982 SAT test that was distributed nationwide for college acceptance grades. Every single student got the answer WRONG.
Out of the hundreds of thousands (more?) of students that took the test, the majority selected answer B, the number 3.
Out of all of these students, only 3 pushed back and said the right answer isn't here. It's none of the 5 answers. The reason no students got the right answer, is that the right answer was not an option.
Here is the real reason I posted this POP Quiz.
It was my friendly reminder to Discern. Many of us have talked about the power of discernment and how important it is. In my personal opinion, we are actively in WWIII. The war is a propaganda war and the weapons are information, behavioral programming, and some very potent influence operations.
The ONLY way to truly combat information warfare is to fight back against it. We serve ourselves best if we discern and think for ourselves and do not take the situation as presented to us. We decide for ourselves and reflect on various perspectives and we deduce the best course of action relying on the power of our minds.
Anyone of us can be tricked. Solving brain problems and keeping your mind sharp is a healthy practice.
Here is the video link explanation to this puzzle. I found it fascinating and I hope you all do as well. We are information warriors and we are all in this together. Stay sharp!
u/#Nov5
The video proves that I suck at math, my head hurts now and I'm feeling dizzy seeing fuzzy white orbs darting around everywhere I look.
I used to think I was good at math.
But, the problem is I keep proving myself wrong.
LoL, yeah I know! It just doesn't add up. (sorry)
Don't feel bad. It is not the math that is difficult. It is understanding the question, and from what perspective you need to look at the issue. That is why relativity is so difficult for most people. Once you see the problem from the right perspective, the rest is rather easy. ..... Relatively speaking that is. HAHA
This is an axiom for understanding many Truths in life. Thank you.
4 :)
How about 1. It's asking for revolutions, not rotations. The center of circle A will make one revolution, one orbit, before reaching its starting point.
Pi= 3.14... meaning a full rotation is DΓΟ
if the smaller one is 1/3.. I would say 9.. roughly
looked it up to check... I getting a drink now
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9 off the top of my head. 12 and cut off the corners of the circle = 9
Correct answer if 4; not listed. Have to account for 2 radius in A on each side. I see 2 correct answers below. Also, as Orion010 points out... The coin would rotate 3 x if you ask number of rotations of small coin. But that is not what was asked. Depends on how you view coin. Try putting one dot in center for A; put don't on edge of small coin where it touches larger. Then count revolutions. You get two answers. Good question.
You will enjoy the video explanation I just posted. The craziest thing was taking a string that is the length of the circumference, straightening it out, and then getting a different answer.
u/#MindBlown
Yep. Thanks.. This is a classic gear issue.
There is a Q connection to all of this. πΈ
What color is the teachers hair?
Green of course. Duh.
Answer = B
Careful. The only given was the ratio of the radius.
I saw this the other day. I would have never gotten it.
None of these answers are right... Its 4. It's the scale plus 1. Becuae the big circle is 3x the size, it's 3+1=4