I have tried to type in the pound symbol for you but Answers.com won't allow it.
It is defined as the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter
The ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, roughly 3.1416, is denoted in science and math by a symbol called 'pi'. The symbol is the 16th letter in the Greek alphabet.
go on google.com and go to images and search up OLYMPIC RINGS.
The "swastika" symbol was a traditional Nordic and Buddhist symbol adopted by the Nazi movements in Germany during the 1930s. It resembles a "X" with the each end of arm of the letter bent at a right angle.
The symbol 'π' is the Greek letter 'p' which is called "pi", like our 'p' is called 'pee'.
pi is a symbol that we all use and it looks something like this....
Pi is one of the letters of the Greek alphabet, and it does look something like II, but not exactly. The top line is continuous. TT is much closer than II.
The first time the symbol Pi was first used for Pi was in ancient Greece in their numbers. The symbol "π" was number 80 in Greece.
pi looks like 3.1415926535897932384626433832795..... as a number and goes on forever.
No. the symbol for pi stems off of the Greek letter pi, probably due to the fact that the discoverer of pi was Greek.
what Englishman introduced the pi symbol, and in what year
The symbol π (pi) is the lowercase form of the 16th Greek letter Pi (prononced pee).
in the greek alphabet the letter P is the same as the pi symbol...i think
Pythagoras was the 1st person who used the pi symbol first
PI is the 16 letter of theGreek alphabet which is equivalent to the English letter P. The symbol for it is the same as the mathematical term for pi:
i think it was albert Einstein gave pi its symbol but im not sure.