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You head out to Florida and go to the beach. You look at all that water and sometimes it is green and sometimes it is blue. Yet, when you pour a glass of it it is clear?!
In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.
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http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c … ltisol.jpg
Does that look like Mars?
It looks like Mars(the red or orange area), but it is Earth. Because grass is here.
"Every place is the center of the universe. And every moment is the most important moment. And everything is the meaning of life." ~ Dan Harmon
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Could be a patch of lichen.
In mathematics, you don't understand things. You just get used to them.
If it ain't broke, fix it until it is.
Always satisfy the Prime Directive of getting the right answer above all else.
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or green algae, like the red one in the red sea, china...?
Jake is Alice's father, Jake is the ________ of Alice's father?
Why is T called island letter?
think, think, think and don't get up with a solution...
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well it has many minerals and red soil present in it.So it must be red.like our earth looks blue because of abundance of water. its what i think.
friendship is tan 90°.
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Hi;
In Bengali, "Tuesday" is called "Mangal Baar"("Baar" means day in Bengali). And "Mangal" means Mars.
And similarly "Tues" is called Mars?
Half a year late, but: the Romans named the days of the week after their gods. All other cultures eventually adopted the Roman naming convention, but some of them translated the god names to the names of equivalent gods in their own culture.
The Germanic tribes did this. Their god of war was named "Tir" or "Tew", depending on the dialect. So they changed Mars to Tew, which by the time it reached English had morphed into "Tues". European languages generally use a variant of either Mars or Tew as the name for this day.
The Germanic tribes has no god equivalent to Saturn, though, so they kept the Roman name for the last day of the week. That is why in English we have Germanic gods for the first 6 days, but a Roman god for the 7th.
"Having thus refreshed ourselves in the oasis of a proof, we now turn again into the desert of definitions." - Bröcker & Jänich
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