There is no way unless you work with crayola.
70 crayons. 90-20=70
The box of crayons because they are more dense
Edwind Binney and Harold Smith made crayons because they saw how the children had to use sticky chalk and the chalk get over there clothing and hand. So they decide to improve it and made crayons.
crayons
No, Crayola crayons are not formulated to apply color to skin, and it would be particularly difficult to use crayons on the soft, moist surface of lips.
Edwind Binney and Harold Smith made crayons because they saw how the children had to use sticky chalk and the chalk get over there clothing and hand. So they decide to improve it and made crayons.
Well you'd have to specify how many crayons are in one box first wouldn't you...
It's a little bit hard to tell what you are talking about because you can't use periods. but from what I have gathered you would have 30 crayons at the beginning of the day... how I figured this out: you start our with X amount of crayons, you give out 14 only getting 12 back, There are 2 crayons that you dont have at the end of the day.(14-12=2) Then you give out 11 crayons. There are 11 Crayons you don't have at the end of the day. So now you add up the 2 Crayons you never got back and the 11 Crayons you gave out (2+11=13) now you can't forget the 17 that you still have. so now you add 13 and 17 which equals 30 (13+17=30) I hope this helped
if you said that the number would be 100
crayons = Malkreide (sing.) crayons = Farbkreide (sing.) crayons = Buntstifte (pl.) crayons = Wachsstifte (pl.)
crayons - les crayons which means pencils. If coloured, they are crayons de couleur.
You could melt different types of crayons to see which color melts faster. that would be categorized as chemistry