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Jolie Lind

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3y ago

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Continue Learning about Algebra

What is the difference between the blue and yellow equality symbol and the red one?

The Blue and Yellow symbol is the general Equality For All symbol, and the Red and Pink one is for Marriage Equality only.


Is green darker than yellow?

The issue is that "green" and "yellow" are not so much specific exact colors as families of colors. A really light green can be lighter than a really dark yellow. However, in general, most people would say that most colors they'd call "green" are darker than most colors they'd call "yellow" (once the yellow gets dark enough, people tend to start calling it tan or brown instead of yellow).


Is it 'You are better than I' or 'You are better than me?

One view:It really isn't that hard to remember the answer to this question. Think about how you could say "You are better than I am." It would not make sense if you were to say "You are better than me am." Therefore the answer to this question is "You are better than I."Another way to think of this is at the beginning of the sentence "I am better than you" it says "I"not "me" so if you turn that sentence backwards it would be "You are better than I" not "You are better than me."Another view:In modern day English, it is acceptable to say "You are better than me." The "than I" version is archaic, and might be okay in a very formal context, but not colloquially. A rule that describes modern English is that you use the subject forms of the pronouns (i.e., "I", "he", "we", and so on) as the unconjoined subject of an explicit finite verb, but elsewhere you use the object forms (i.e., "me", "him", "us", and so on). This view considers "than" to function like a preposition (just as you say "before me" but "before I do").


What is a sentence for the phrase half a loaf is better than none?

Those who get half a loaf become happy because half a loaf is better than none.


Where can you find the golden ratio in art?

The Golden Ratio In Paintings Piet Mondrian, Compositions in Red, Blue, and Yellow, 1930. Salvador Dali, The Sacrament of the Last Supper, 1955.