answersLogoWhite

0

Subjects>Math>Math & Arithmetic

What does inbitious?

User Avatar

Anonymous

∙ 13y ago
Updated: 8/3/2025

"Inbitious" appears to be a misspelling or a less common term, as it is not widely recognized in English. If you meant "ambitious," it refers to having a strong desire and determination to achieve success or goals. If it is a specific term from a niche context, please provide additional details for clarification.

User Avatar

AnswerBot

∙ 6mo ago
Copy

What else can I help you with?

Continue Learning about Math & Arithmetic
Related Questions
Trending Questions
What is a quadrilateral with 4 angles? Find the greatest common monomial factor 3x2-15x4? How do you write one inch and a quarter? Square root of 49 then cube it? Term used to describe the most frequently occurring number in a dataset? What is 20.16 divided by 14? Is an a the shape of a polygon? What pick 3 number has come out the most in midday drawing? What is the volume of a cone with the height of 7 ft and a width of 2ft? What statistical measures corresponds to what is popularly called the average? Is 165 odd number? What is the purpose of a pendulum? A program in C that accepts 15 different numbers and find the LCM and HCM? How many squares in 1600 ft? What is the factored form of 5x plus 70? What terms describe triangle? What is the answer to 250 times 8? Give examples of relations and functions? Resolver metodo de despeje 2x-9 equals -10 plus x? What is the comparison of 2 numbers by multiplication called?

Resources

Leaderboard All Tags Unanswered

Top Categories

Algebra Chemistry Biology World History English Language Arts Psychology Computer Science Economics

Product

Community Guidelines Honor Code Flashcard Maker Study Guides Math Solver FAQ

Company

About Us Contact Us Terms of Service Privacy Policy Disclaimer Cookie Policy IP Issues
Answers Logo
Copyright ©2026 Infospace Holdings LLC, A System1 Company. All Rights Reserved. The material on this site can not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with prior written permission of Answers.