The number of different questions is virtually limitless, as questions can be formed by combining various topics, contexts, and structures. Each question can vary in complexity, specificity, and intent, leading to an infinite number of possibilities. Additionally, new topics and languages continuously emerge, further expanding the potential for unique questions. Therefore, while it's impossible to quantify an exact number, the range of possible questions is extraordinarily vast.
It is not one person answering the questions. Many different people answer the questions. They are of many different ages, from young to old.
Different people answer a questions, so the answer is MANY people answer your questions you post.
Questions are put in so many different places in a school book to make it easier to find the answers. Instead of putting all the questions at the end of the chapter, sometimes questions will be placed in the middle of the chapter.
NOO! They ARE different questions and should be answered differently
Open questions - invite a wide variety of responses Closed questions - have a single answer
Many different users with different levels of knowledge and skills answer the questions. So the quality, accuracy, and tone varies. Some questions call for opinions, and there are nearly as many opinions are there are people.
If you are wondering how many people there are here to answer questions, there are quiet a few different people.
how many different currencies in the world are there? how much money is there in the world, including all the different currencies?
To determine how many questions you can miss on a test where a score of 70 is required to pass, you need to know the total number of questions on the test. If the test has 100 questions, for example, you can miss up to 30 questions and still score 70. However, if the total number of questions is different, you would calculate 70% of that number to find out how many questions you can miss.
You can ask as many different questions as you like, but questions that ask the same thing will eventually be merged together, so there is no advantage to asking the same basic thing in several different ways. This does not increase your likelihood of getting an answer, and you may get a number of useless or contradictory answers.
Different math questions require different methods to solve.
Depends on the laws where YOU are (we get questions from many different countries). In MOST of the US, no.