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I wish I had more characters to work with...anyway, since when you are in debt, you have a negative amount of money, what would happen if you had to pay the square root of that? (this is sort've like the "If three people are in a room, and five leave, how many have to return for the room to be empty?")

2006-10-26 13:32:12 · 4 answers · asked by devmorg1 2 in Science & Mathematics Mathematics

4 answers

1. Being in debt does not mean you have no cash on hand, so sqrt( C.O.H)

2. Any lender will twist this statement to "You have to pay the square root of what you owe.", so sqrt(debt)

3. Debts are liabilities. Things you own , investments, money others owe you, and C.O.H. are assets, so sqrt(assets)

4. If you are dealing with the government, sqrt(everything)

2006-10-26 13:43:33 · answer #1 · answered by Helmut 7 · 0 0

The square root of a negative number is something i where i's imaginary... but in this case yeah I think they want you to say you would owe nothing.

2006-10-26 20:39:47 · answer #2 · answered by LaxPlayer35 1 · 0 0

there is no square root theory to paying debt

2006-10-26 20:39:49 · answer #3 · answered by Mopar Muscle Gal 7 · 0 0

0 cuz i have nothing to start with, and nothing to end with

2006-10-26 20:35:12 · answer #4 · answered by Mystie 3 · 0 0

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