I think it's one thousand five
one thousand five
To get the 'a' you have to include 'Thousand', where you get the 'o' and 'u' for free, just need an 'e' and an 'i', so I'm going for : One thousand and five Or if your rules allow you could go for One thousand point zero
Yes
I think it is one quarter.
twenty!
There is a possible confusion over how the last part of your question ("contain no 5") can be interpreted:it could be a badly written shorthand of the word number: "Nº" also written "No." also written "No" and very badly written as "no", meaning "contains the number 5", meaning "the number 5" - the number between 4 and 6 and less than 10;it could be a badly written shorthand of the word number: "Nº" also written "No." also written "No" and very badly written as "no", meaning "contains the number 5", meaning "the digit 5" - the digit 5 in any place value column;It negates the sense so that "contain no 5" means "do not contain the digit 5".In interpretation number 1 there are no such numbers, as 5 is less than 10 and all two digit numbers are greater than, or equal to 10 (I suspect that this meaning is definitely not intended).There are 90 two digit numbers (10 - 99); of them:9 contain a 5 as the second digit: 15, 25, ..., 9510 contain a 5 as the first digit: 50, 51, ..., 59So there are 19 of the digit 5 used.However, 55 is counted twice, meaning there are 18 numbers which contain the digit 5. (This is the solution to the interpretation number 2.)Which means there are 90 - 18 = 72 numbers which do not contain the digit 5. (The solution to interpretation number 3, which I suspect is the required answer.)Use whichever solution meets your intended interpretation of the question you wrote.
The Akkadian alphabet was the first to have vowels, before that all letters were consenants-Hebrew for a long time had no vowels.
Aurelio has all five vowels, and there have been a few Aurelios in MLB history.
No. It was Greek.
7 17 37
No, look at the vowels in the word. You have "i.e." The rule is when two vowels go walking the first does the talking. So you hear the long "I"
There are many ways to teach first graders to understand vowels. The best way is to use them in games.
Open, lazy, silent, frozen, maple, flavor, even.