The phrase "people die in threes" originates from the observation that deaths often seem to occur in clusters, particularly among celebrities or public figures, leading to the perception that when one notable person dies, two more will follow soon after. This phenomenon is largely anecdotal and may be influenced by cognitive biases, such as the human tendency to seek patterns in random events. The phrase has been popularized in media and culture, reinforcing the idea despite lacking any statistical basis.
Yes, it is possible.
if we don't come together, we will die.
It is 6.45, approx.
It is 0.8217
there is 0% probability, unless you are some super nerd, and calculate the chance of it splitting the six and you getting two threes in one roll :p
There are two ways to answer this. At the outset we have to assume this is a regular six-sided die. Some of you guys play D&D and have 20-sided dice. This isn't one of those. If we divide 48 rolls by six sides, we get eight occurrences of each number per side. If we could figure out a way to make the six sides consistently come up in equal quantities, we'd get eight ones, eight twos and so on until we got eight sixes. Real dice are random, so you could get anywhere from zero threes to 48 threes if you rolled one die 48 times. The real answer is, "it could be anything."
"Wann sind die Leute angekommen" would be the phrase to use.
Die Hard 3, when the guy has to difuse the bomb in the school, not sure if this is the first use of the phrase though !
Once. Once you die, you do not come back to life for another go at it.
If you mean come back as in reincarnation, I don't believe in that; many other people don't believe in it, and many people do.
Them people owed they had to come up wit some1
"Your hour is come" is just an old-fashioned way to say "it's your time" (usually meaning "time to die"). The phrase means that the person knows it's his or her time to do whatever it is.