Each letter usually has seven bits, so the word "sane" has 4x7, or 28 bits.
16 bits
2 bytes=16 bits make a word
Sane is an adjective.
The word 'sane' is not a verb.The word 'sane' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The noun form of the adjective 'sane' is saneness.A related noun form is sanity.
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.
sane
depends....
She seemed perfectly sane during the conversation, displaying rational and logical thinking.
The suffix of the word "sane" is "-ane." In linguistics, a suffix is a group of letters added at the end of a word to modify its meaning or grammatical function. However, "sane" itself is a complete word and does not typically take a suffix to form a new word.