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

17 answers

Unless it's a baker's dozen, then it would be 6 1/2.

2007-01-25 06:05:45 · answer #1 · answered by The Nana of Nana's 7 · 3 2

Yes because 6 = 1/2 dozen

2007-01-25 06:07:04 · answer #2 · answered by sarabmw 5 · 0 0

thrilling question. certain and..... no. honestly both equivalent a 1/2 dozen. notwithstanding, say, you've donuts and they are an same except 6 have chocolate icing and six have vanilla icing. therefore, they are diverse. So volume certain, similar component? no longer unavoidably so.

2016-12-03 01:07:41 · answer #3 · answered by lemanski 4 · 0 0

No. The expression is "Six of one, half a dozen of the other."

It means "The two alternatives are equivalent or indifferent; it doesn't matter which one we choose."

2007-01-25 06:07:23 · answer #4 · answered by Danny 3 · 0 0

depends the context. one recipe has 6 cups of flour the other only has 1....

2007-01-25 06:08:55 · answer #5 · answered by mathwizz83 2 · 0 0

Yes, except when it's the Baker.

2007-01-25 06:06:22 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

in one what??? in the other what????

I could have 6 keys (or what ever) in one hand and 14 in the other??

2007-01-25 06:11:10 · answer #7 · answered by Meli 5 · 0 1

nope their are 7 we use a baked bakers doz

2007-01-25 06:07:43 · answer #8 · answered by Umphery's Mc Joe'S 4 · 2 0

Perhaps. or there could be one in each of the other six, two in the other 3, etc......

2007-01-25 06:07:05 · answer #9 · answered by XXXDirtyDirtyGirlXXX 6 · 1 1

brain cells in a democrat? No - I'm pretty sure it stops at 6.

2007-01-25 06:06:22 · answer #10 · answered by I hate friggin' crybabies 5 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers