It doesn't have to. It will prevent you from repeating the numbers in your head easily, this tactic is commonly used for memory and thus could trip people up. But if you could create a mnemonic device for remembering the numbers (1,12,13,15,19,20 could be remembered as the word "almost" with 'a' being the first letter of the alphabet, 'l' being the 12th and so on) then you could in theory remember a nearly infinite amount of numbers even after reciting the alphabet.
They provided the basis of our alphabet.
Ukrainian has 33 letters (34 if you include the apostrophe, which affect pronunciation of certain letters).For more information about the Ukrainian alphabet, see Omniglot.
DMETL
It decreases it
No
no gender does not affect memory
It is the Commutative Property which states that changing the order when adding numbers does not affect the result.
The outlier skews the mean towards it.
I don't remember
i dont remember
The Greek and Roman alphabets were derived from it, and it forms the basis of our alphabetic writing today, with which we communicate and record.
Pseudorandom numbers can affect the accuracy of a simulation by accidentally causes pattens that could be missed by the system. This could skew the accuracy.