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17 answers

McDonald's pies are rectangular.

2007-07-07 09:15:03 · answer #1 · answered by Solar Achievers 5 · 4 1

"Pi r squared" is a math formula to measure the area of a circle. Pies that you eat are circles. When people say "pie are square" they might mean the area of the circular pie (pi r squared). Square there is not the shape, it means times by itself (3 squared is 3X3).

Some of the people who say that might be joking or playing with your head.

2007-07-07 09:26:33 · answer #2 · answered by Brandon C 3 · 4 0

omg! u genius!! u're prolly wonderin y these ppl r laughin at u 2!! it's not pie are square, it's pi r squared!! gosh! pie r squared is a math term!! i'm goin in2 7th grade and i know that! gosh!! pie r square means pie times radius, squared. it is to find out the circumference (the distance around) of a circle.

so you take pie, which is 3.14, times r, which stands for the radius of a circle (which is the distance from the center of the circle to the rim of the circle). then you take that number times itself. then that will get the circumference of the circle.

so its:
3.14 x r = N
N x N = circumference

2007-07-07 09:25:12 · answer #3 · answered by TrackSports 2 · 4 0

My girlfriend makes a Shephards Pie in a rectangular pan. Pie are rectangular 2.

2007-07-07 09:19:53 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

its actually a mathematic tool to measure a circle Pi R2 wich is pronounced pie are squared

2007-07-07 09:16:11 · answer #5 · answered by Stevo 4 · 4 0

pie is also used for math not the real pie

2007-07-07 09:14:59 · answer #6 · answered by Kaylee Patrisha Dearmore 1 · 4 0

lol, ur funny.

its pi as in 3.14, something. the r is the radius of a circle and u square r in its expontial form, ie 3.14 times r^2

2007-07-08 00:06:55 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

kay, i hope youre kidding, cuz thats one of the stupidest questions ive ever heard, unless you havnt made it into grade 8 yet or never passed it, theres no reason you should be asking this. GO BACK TO SCHOOL! ooooooooh snap, i just read roybattys , thats so true! YES.

2007-07-07 09:15:50 · answer #8 · answered by (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)rin 2 · 4 0

lol. It's a formula for the area of a circle
pi(r)^2

2007-07-07 09:14:22 · answer #9 · answered by Dill 4 · 3 0

Actually it's equal to *approximately* 3.14159 ... but the number is about 19 decimal places.

LOL

2007-07-07 09:44:40 · answer #10 · answered by gnarlyskigirl 1 · 3 0

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