Isn't that Pi Approximation day? (I nicked that from the wikipedia article)
A Gregg's pie for £3.14 ; I'll bite.
I think that your bald implication there that "schadenfreude" is an English word required at the very least considerable élan, and arguably shaded into chutzpahDon't you think the German word "Schadenfreude" is expressed quite well by the single English word "schadenfreude"?
Touché.I think that your bald implication there that "schadenfreude" is an English word required at the very least considerable élan, and arguably shaded into chutzpah
Catching up ....
FTFY
The grocery store across the road from my work is selling their bakery's lovely pies today for $3.14 and they're normally $12! I am thinking apple and cherry...A Gregg's pie for £3.14 ; I'll bite.
But what I’m suggesting is that pi can only ever be the sum of an infinite number of parts or a product of a number that you cannot express.
Is that the smokers one?Galois theory
yeah but i'll bet they're a bit bigger than a Greggs pie.The grocery store across the road from my work is selling their bakery's lovely pies today for $3.14 and they're normally $12! I am thinking apple and cherry...
A ten-sided die. Dice is plural. You can express the result of rolling a ten-sided die 1000 times using a number between 1 and 4 (inclusive) if the function is along the lines of MOD 4 (SUM) + 1.It's a number that you cannot express as a ratio of two integers but that doesn't mean it's inexpressible, it just means you're limiting your options artificially. You can't express "the attraction due to gravity" as a ratio of two integers, you can't express Schadenfreude as a single English word, and you can't express the result of rolling a ten-sided dice 1000 times using a number between 1 and 4
"Dice are plural", surely?A ten-sided die. Dice is plural. You can express the result of rolling a ten-sided die 1000 times using a number between 1 and 4 (inclusive) if the function is along the lines of MOD 4 (SUM) + 1.
Same.I have nothing useful to add at this point. Just thought I ought to post something.
"Dice" is plural."Dice are plural", surely?
Same.