You could say, "entre los dos" between the two. Or, you could say, "en medio de los dos," which literally means "in [the] middle of the two."
You need to order them and then find the middle one (or the mean of the middle two).You need to order them and then find the middle one (or the mean of the middle two).You need to order them and then find the middle one (or the mean of the middle two).You need to order them and then find the middle one (or the mean of the middle two).
You add them together and divide them by two.
false
You take the arithmetic mean of the two middle numbers.
there is not a whole number that is in the middle of the two, 50.5 is the middle number, if taking a mean it would be 50, 100/2=50, but there is no median (middle) number.
No. Middle English is two words.
Twice in Math would mean the same as it would anywhere elses. It would mean to do something two times.
Depends on how strictly you mean "the middle." These two were found in Webster's, but not the Scrabble dictionary: diiodide triodion These contain that string, but not precisely in the middle. They were found in the Scrabble dictionary: periodic periodid
The two dots above a letter, you mean, would be called a diaeresis and/or an umlaut.
If it is exactly in the middle, it would be known as its average, also called the mean.
You take the arithmetic mean of the two middle values.
The median is the middle number when the numbers are listed in order; if there is an even number of numbers, the median is the mean of the middle two. 35,380 - two numbers - two is even, therefore median is the mean of the middle two, ie the mean of 35 and 380: median = (35 + 380) ÷ 2 = 207.5