Considering how difficult it would be to literally bring in 1 million of something that you could see with the human eye, start thinking MUCH smaller...
Isn't the idea of an assignment like this for YOU to use YOUR brain and come up with what you could bring in?
Congrats, everyone, for spoonfeeding yet another homework assignment. People sure do learn a lot when you just hand them the answers and don't make them use their brains at all.
2006-11-08 14:05:19
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Exactly one million? Will over one million do? A 5 inch cube of 1 millimeter sand will be about 1 million sand grains. If you do the math you will get 2 million grains. Why? Fine sand is about 50% void space. Air.
2006-11-08 22:18:47
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answer #2
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answered by lil'oleJewler 2
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Dude...that is a lot of stuff. Go for something small like lentils or grains of rice. If you use rice, you can argue why it should not be tossed at the bride and groom. Think how many people can be fed with 1,000,000 grains of rice.
2006-11-08 22:06:43
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answer #3
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answered by empire_solstice 1
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A million grains of salt
One cup is approximately one millon grains of salt.
So pour a cup of salt into a container with a lid and take that to class.
2006-11-08 22:14:06
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answer #4
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answered by neona807 5
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take in a jar of sand...
or a 1 megabyte disk... = 1 million bytes..
or take in a piece of string that is 1,000,000 mm's long
take in ten bags of 100's and 1000's sprinkles..
2006-11-08 22:05:14
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answer #5
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answered by channille 3
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bring a bottle of mud. Tell there are a million germs in it. No one checks it either. Easy, scoring.
2006-11-08 22:17:09
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answer #6
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answered by Naval Architect 5
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bring in a text book and say this contains a million atoms
2006-11-08 22:01:57
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answer #7
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answered by rjb2k6 3
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a million pennys....a million ripped pieces of papper?
2006-11-08 22:00:10
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answer #8
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answered by pynkiboo1360 1
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