English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

If one child has 6 2/3 sand piles and another has 3 1/3, and you combine them, how many sand piles do you have?

2007-01-03 10:11:31 · 21 answers · asked by wa_tailback2 2 in Entertainment & Music Jokes & Riddles

alright no need to get super technical alright

2007-01-03 10:16:16 · update #1

21 answers

1

2007-01-03 10:13:15 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

1

2007-01-03 18:18:20 · answer #2 · answered by justmemimi 6 · 0 0

1

2007-01-03 18:13:33 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

How do you have 2/3 of a sand pile? Wouldn't that count as 1 sand pile? It would just be smaller than the others.

2007-01-03 18:14:52 · answer #4 · answered by mountie218 4 · 0 0

10 piles together for the kids, but no sand piles for me unless I run up and push the kids over and screah HAHAHAHAHA in a loud voice. JUSTTTTTT kidddddding :D

How & why :
6+3= 9
2/3+ 1/3 = 3/3
3/3= 1
9+1=10

2007-01-03 18:19:15 · answer #5 · answered by purrfectica 2 · 0 3

10

2007-01-03 18:14:57 · answer #6 · answered by Renee 1 · 0 3

There's no such thing as a fraction of a pile of anything. A pile is a pile, whether it has two items or a million.

A better question would have been, "How many grains of sand does it take before you can call it a pile?"

Anyway, if you put them all together, you have one pile.

2007-01-03 18:13:42 · answer #7 · answered by OhWhatCanIDo 4 · 2 2

One sand pile.

2007-01-03 18:23:48 · answer #8 · answered by Katie Girl 6 · 0 0

10 in Math, but I guess it would just be 1 huge pile.

2007-01-03 18:15:09 · answer #9 · answered by singh7e7 1 · 0 1

6 and 2/3 what? Pounds? Ounces?
It doesn't matter. The answer is pi.

2007-01-03 18:28:13 · answer #10 · answered by mizz_milk06 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers