in the tenth anniversery collection of Calvin and Hobbes, Bill Watterson says he leaves the answer to what the reader thinks.
No.
Calvin and Hobbes is a comic strip created by Bill Watterson. It is a comic strip About a Boy and his stuffed tiger, The boy (Calvin) pretends that his tiger is real. It is funny because sometimes he and the tiger wrestle, when it is really all him. Calvin and Hobbes are cartoon characters, Calvin is a little boy and hobbes is his stuffed toy - a tiger, who comes to life in Calvin's imaginary world.
Yes, Calvin from the comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes" had a stuffed toy raccoon named "Hobbes." Hobbes was a central character in the strip and was portrayed as a real, talking tiger in Calvin's imagination.
No, they are not real....they are just an imaginary fantasy beast.
No they are just imaginary
If a number is pure imaginary then it has no real component. If it is a real number, then there is no imaginary component. If it has both real and imaginary components, then it is a complex number.
I'm pretty sure it's real. But that's just a wild guess...
Some are real and some are imaginary
No, they are imaginary (unreal).
The best word to complete the analogy "shallow is to deep as imaginary is to" is "real." In this analogy, shallow and deep are antonyms, just as imaginary and real are antonyms. Shallow represents a lack of depth, while deep represents significant depth. Similarly, imaginary represents something that is not real, while real represents something that actually exists.
Imaginary numbers are not a subset of the real numbers; imaginary means not real.
Type your answer here... JUST CAUSE FOR COMPLAINT (REAL OR IMAGINARY)