No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.
See mean-8. Or get a dictionary.
There is no statistical term such as "deviation mean".
No, the geometric mean is not the same as the mean of two numbers.
my child (slang)
"Mome" is pronounced as "mohm".
Mome Ki Gudiya was created in 1972.
The word mome is a noun. A mome is a term for a stupid person. This term is no longer in use in present day English.
"mon môme" is a slangish name for a child. This is out-of-touch nowadays.
With an accent (môme) it is ... it means "kid."
i guess so cuz like who cant mome
In Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass, Humpty Dumpty says this:`Well, a "rath" is a sort of green pig: but "mome" I'm not certain about. I think it's short for "from home" -- meaning that they'd lost their way, you know.' But in an earlier publication, Carroll defined 'mome' in this way:(hence 'solemome' 'solemone' and 'solemn') "grave" Much of the point of Jabberwocky, is that it is comprised of meaningless nonsense words, and the definition of them is irrelevant. Carroll's inconsistency of definition demonstrates this, so it is just as valid to ascribe the words with your own meanings as it is to adhere to Carroll's.
It is a word that means fool. It is not commonly in use any longer.
An example of assonance in the poem "Jabberwocky" by Lewis Carroll is: "And the mome raths outgrabe." The repetition of the long "o" sound in the words "mome" and "outgrabe" creates an assonance, adding to the whimsical and nonsensical tone of the poem.
môme is Parisian slang for a child and is also included in the famous poem Jabberwocky
his father was a babtist pritre an mome worked at haome occupied with eight chilldren]