If we're counting the number of flowers and petals and whatnot, it's 25.
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If we're counting the number of flowers and petals and whatnot, it's 25.
fruit question is 14 and flower question is 25.
I don't think it's fair to judge flowers by the number of petals they have....they're all beautiful. :rolleyes::rose:
when I try to solve these sorts of things THIS happens!!
http://www.sherv.net/cm/emoticons/sc...y-emoticon.gif
I hated Shakespeare. Julius Caesar in Grade 10, I think. I'd always done well in school without trying too hard then Julius Caesar. It was incomprehensible, it terrified me. I had never failed in school before, now I knew I could.
I bought the Coles Notes for it that had a line by line translation of the play and notes explaining everything. I studied for weeks and aced the test.
I'm just rambling now, but I had a similar thing happen in 12th grade. In grade 11 I took pre-calculus math. Didn't do so good, got a mark in the 60s somewhere. The teacher suggested I take regular math and not the advanced in Grade 12. I didn't listen and failed my first test, a 44. That same teacher told my parents I needed to switch to regular math. I found that out years later, my parents said nothing to me at the time.
I stole a book from the shelves at the back of the classroom. And I worked the problems in it for hours every night, listening to Tchaikovsky on cassette. Night after night, hours and hours - hundreds of hours, I was just afraid to fail.
The teacher handed the exams back. All under 80 were passed out randomly. Then 80 and above in order. He kept calling names, and they weren't me. Then he called me and when I took the test from him he said you have the highest mark.
I don't know which of us was more surprised.
What a great story, DaveP! Just shows what we can do when we put our minds to it...I hear you about being "floored"...one year, iirc, grade 10, I came first in English...can't beat the feeling, can you? :cheesygrin:
As for Julius Caesar...loved, loved, loved it!!!!! We even went as a classroom to Stratford to see it...it's still my favourite play and he's still my favourite guy. Caesar. Then Shakespeare.
It was so weird, though...I could read it as if I were reading normal, everyday prose..never or rarely had to flip to the back pages for an interpretation. Our DD was the same; it was like we were reading normal English. Our Grandson reads 2 grades above his level, so we're wondering if he'll do the same. Hope I'm around to see it! :rolleyes:
I still have a small, leather-bound copy of Julius Caesar and pick it up every so often to read portions of it.....
OMG - I totally misinterpreted the thread by the title ("just what does coconut mean")... glad I opened it and saw it wasnt about that racist saying... whew!
My answer for the coconut question is a daiquiri :cocktail:
A gross fruit.