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Taking out some of logistics of how order is determined and how they're throw. If you were to randomly pick a letter from the alphabet 26 times in a row, the chances are 1 out of 6.15611958 x 1036 that they would be in order. So pretty slim.
The Spanish alphabet, also known as the 'abecedario' consists of either 27 or 29 letters, depending on who you ask. This means either there is only one extra letter or three extra letters - not four. There used to be three extra letters for a total of 29; those are:ch (ce hache)ll (elle)ñ (eńe)However in 2010, the Real Academia Española, the official institution that oversees the Spanish language, dropped 'ch' and 'll' from the abecedario, saying that they are technically digraphs, not letters (sets of two letters representing a single sound). This means that ñ is now, officially, the only 'extra' letter in the alphabet for a total of 27.Your mileage may vary though - if you are taking a Spanish class, ask your teacher if they prefer to include 'ch' and 'll' in their alphabet.
Because if you subtract 746 it equals 13 which is unlucky
By taking secret letters back and forth without getting caught
There were 32 teams taking part in the 2010 world cup.
The answer depends on the character set, the case as well as the font. For the upper case for the Roman alphabet and taking the simplest form, they are:H, O and X.
Yes
It is 5 to 21 (taking y to be a vowel).
It is 5 to 21 (taking y to be a vowel).
Yes
The Spanish alphabet, also known as the 'abecedario' consists of either 27 or 29 letters, depending on who you ask. This means either there is only one extra letter or three extra letters - not four. There used to be three extra letters for a total of 29; those are:ch (ce hache)ll (elle)ñ (eńe)However in 2010, the Real Academia Española, the official institution that oversees the Spanish language, dropped 'ch' and 'll' from the abecedario, saying that they are technically digraphs, not letters (sets of two letters representing a single sound). This means that ñ is now, officially, the only 'extra' letter in the alphabet for a total of 27.Your mileage may vary though - if you are taking a Spanish class, ask your teacher if they prefer to include 'ch' and 'll' in their alphabet.
Taking out some of logistics of how order is determined and how they're throw. If you were to randomly pick a letter from the alphabet 26 times in a row, the chances are 1 out of 6.15611958 x 1036 that they would be in order. So pretty slim.
There are 10 total numbers, and 26 letter in the Alphabet. Taking away the 0 and the M, there are only 9 available numbers and 25 available letters. 34 x 34 = 1156
The Spanish alphabet, also known as the 'abecedario' consists of either 27 or 29 letters, depending on who you ask. This means either there is only one extra letter or three extra letters - not four. There used to be three extra letters for a total of 29; those are:ch (ce hache)ll (elle)ñ (eńe)However in 2010, the Real Academia Española, the official institution that oversees the Spanish language, dropped 'ch' and 'll' from the abecedario, saying that they are technically digraphs, not letters (sets of two letters representing a single sound). This means that ñ is now, officially, the only 'extra' letter in the alphabet for a total of 27.Your mileage may vary though - if you are taking a Spanish class, ask your teacher if they prefer to include 'ch' and 'll' in their alphabet.
12
Well, CAPTION is 7 letters, and you want to take all 7 of them and re-arrange them, and the order will matter, you will use the operation: nPr. The formula for this is: n!/(n-r)! In which the ! represents all the numbers counting down from the original number to 1. So if it was 5!, it would be 5 x 4 x 3 x 2 x 1= 120 The n is the number of items that you have, and the r is the number of items that you're taking. In CAPTION you have 7 letters, and you're taking 7 letters and re-arranging them in different ways, so it would be 7!/(7-7)!=5040 ways total!
By practising writing, spacing the letters carefully, and taking your time.