12-6-(4-3)=5 people assuming no other items covering feet are present
Four shoes and three socks.
wear boots with no socks. or put on 10 socks then put on shoes and go for a run. or you could wear 3 pears of dirty socks for about 4 or 6 days.
Multiplication and addition of ordinary numbers is commutative: 2 + 3 = 3 + 2 = 5 5 * 7 = 7 * 5 = 35 It would be easy to jump to the conclusion that 'everything' is. But operations on clothes aren't: put on socks + put on shoes = ok put on shoes + put on socks = not so ok
Among his many scientific interests, Albert Einstein liked to play violin, smoke a pipe, wear shoes with no socks, and sailing.
For 8 socks...Each shoe pair needs two socks. For the first foot, you can choose from 8 socks. For the second, you can choose from 7. Therefore, for each pair of shoes, you have 7*8 possible sock combinations, or 56 possibilities per pair of shoes. With three pairs of shoes, this means it's 3*56, or 168 possible combinations, assuming that the shoes can only go together in pairs.If the shoes can be unpaired, but must be on the correct feet, then there is a slightly more complicated answer. You have three shoe options per foot. for each shoe you choose, you have another three options for the other foot. Making just your shoe combinations 3*3, or 9. For the first shoe you wear, you can choose from 8 socks. So for the first foot, you have 3 options for shoe, and 8 options for socks, leaving you with 27 combinations for that foot. For the second foot, you have 3 options for shoes, since they don't have to match. for each of those three options for shoe, you have 7 options for socks. Therefore, you have 21 potions for the second foot. For each first foot option, any of the second foot options can be selected, making your answer 27*21 or 567 combinations.If you can wear the shoes on the wrong feet...This means that foot #1 has 6 options for shoes, and foot #2 has 5 (since you can't wear one shoe on both feet).For the first shoe, you have 8 socks to choose from, so your options are 6*8 or 48 possible combos on the first foot. For the second foot, you have 5 options for shoes, and each of those has 7 options for socks. Thus you have 5*7 or 35 possible combinations of sock and shoe for second foot. For each combo on foot 1 we have 35 combos on foot 2 to choose from, which means 48*35 is our answer, or 1,680 possible combinations if we don't have to wear the shoes on the correct feet.If you're in college or beyond, I would go with either 567 (meaning you can't wear the shoes on the wrong feet, but they don't have to match) or 1,680 (meaning you can wear them on the wrong feet). If you're in high school or below, go with 168 because they probably didn't try to mix you up with mixed shoe pairings. At least, I don't think they would. But you never know.
Barefoot means not wearing shoes or socks.
Its called "barefooted walking" or "walking barefoot." Some people say "walking without shoes or socks" or "going barefoot."
Socks. I only go barefoot when I don't intend to go back outside.
Some people like wearing socks with leather shoes, and some do not. It comes down to personal preference.
I'd suggest wearing short ankles socks. People can barely see them, and your feet won't stink! :)
Shoes i think. better traction and grip
Yes! For grades K-6, in the dress code, students can choose to go barefoot, or wear sandals with backstraps or shoes and socks. They can take off their sandals or shoes and socks at school too if they want. But, for grades 7-12, they must wear shoes.
Wearing socks?
Fungus growing between toes that is red and itchy. Caused by not completely drying feet and doing things like walking barefoot in locker rooms and wearing shoes without socks
because his shoes and socks got stuck to the tar which was on the inside basement steps
It is nice to see a guy wearing these reebok shoes. I like it myself without socks.
In most photos where Ed Westwick's feet are shown, he is wearing socks.