3 inputs and 2 output
16 bits
2 bytes=16 bits make a word
Each letter usually has seven bits, so the word "sane" has 4x7, or 28 bits.
5 per 4 bits, so anything over, but not including, 1001
16
If you are using the ASCII system, the word "duck", as it has four letters, contains 4 bytes, or 32 bits.
A word typically refers to a 16-bit quantity, where 32-bits is called a longword.
No, computers have been built with as few as 1 bit in a word to 72 bits in a word and architectures have been proposed with as many as 256 bits in a word.
depends....
9 binary input lines ==> 512 different input 'words'
8bit 16 bits 32 bits and 64 bits and 128 bits imply a broadside [parallel] output of that many bits of digital information on a buss output. these bits represent a word output. therefore the longest the word the more information can be processed at a time imply more bits the faster the computer or data flow.