nothing
you can fold a 4 piece in half 5 times
you are folding it, there is still only one piece of paper
a) It depends on paper size, and the quality of the paper.b) A piece of paper may be folded in half approximately 6-7 times consecutively, without unfolding, since the seventh fold and beyond would require bending hundreds (2^n) of layers .MythBusters managed to fold a football field sized piece of paper 11 times.
yes if it is not in half, but if you you mean in half, then: A normal piece of paper, no. The width becomes to thick and the length too small. But here are some websites where they get a huge piece of paper so the length doesn't become too small, and they can do it 11 or 12 times: http://pomonahistorical.org/12times.htm http://blogs.howstuffworks.com/2009/07/23/why-cant-you-fold-a-piece-of-paper-more-than-seven-times/
It is hard to explain, but it basically amounts to the size to fold ratio. A large enough, thin enough, sheet of paper can be folded more than eight times, but it has to be the size of a football field in order to do it. 128 layers of paper is a lot to fold in half to get to 256!
You can't fold a piece of paper 50 times
fold hotdog style then into 3rds
you can fold a 4 piece in half 5 times
you are folding it, there is still only one piece of paper
true
Origami, of Japanese origin, is a nice way to fold paper into recognizable figures. So, you fold paper.
snowflakes have 6 sides, so you fold the piece of paper 3 times.
6
The answer will depend on the shape of the paper that you start with.
Get a square piece of paper. Fold it into a triangle (diagnol half) two times.Then, fold it 3 times. Then,fold the little thing in, and you're done.
get a piece of paper and write on it. Then fold it. Your welcome.
triangles