I certainly can't. I wasn't even aware cups were made of pennies. Or how about number 12, where is asks you to select the related subtraction sentence, but neither are subtraction sentences?
English
#Offtopic
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*head asplodes*
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2 AntwortenBearbeitet von C80: 11/20/2013 6:08:03 PMI love the 45% for getting 1/2 of the questions right. [spoiler]Answers are D,C,A,C[/spoiler]
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Wait, is it a test for 1st graders, or a test made by 1st graders?
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D [b] [/b]
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I'm pretty sure I could explain the fundamentals of calculus (even dogs can recognize curves) to first graders more effectively than this teacher can explain addition.
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BEGINNING TRANSMISSION: (Low melodious hum.) I believe the answer for question one is 1. ENDING TRANSMISSION:
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4 AntwortenBearbeitet von cxkxr: 11/20/2013 2:24:46 PMNumber twelve is stupid. Addition is now subtraction and 2+2 might as well equal 0.
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The way these questions are worded are terrible...
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1. I'm going to say that there are five coins, and the cup says six because it needs six coins to make one cup of tea, so it's asking how many more coins you need, which is one. 2. I'm going to suppose it's a typo.
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That is a truly odd way of writing it. In trying to simplify it they've somehow made it a horrible riddle...
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I can't even figure out what it wants from me. Such a terrible question.
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16 AntwortenBearbeitet von HurtfulTurkey: 11/20/2013 2:18:05 PMThe answer is 1. It's just to help kids relate different things mathematically. You have 5 pennies and the whole is 6. The difference is 1.
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Bearbeitet von Hargbeast: 11/20/2013 2:36:30 PMinb4poorlywritten ...And it apears I was correct. This is the kind of question that you're supposed to refuse to answer.
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4 AntwortenWeird lol! But I think the teacher probably showed them this problem with an actual cup and pennies, then gave them the test. (at least I hope he did)
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my brain died.