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How Much Percent You Like Narnia 100 Percent Less Or More

What is the most useless fact you know?

A strawberry isn’t a berry, but a banana is.One of the first people to survive going over Niagara Falls in a barrel died by slipping on an orange peal.More people are bitten by New Yorkers each year than by sharks.Koalas don’t drink water. The eucalyptus leaves they eat have a high water content, so they don’t need to drink.Apples are more effective at waking you up in the morning than caffeine.There is a town called Dildo in Canada.There is a town called Fucking in Austria.Americans only count for about 3% of the world’s population, but we consume 60% of all global resources.The AK-47 counts for 20% of all firearms ever produced.The “Abrams” tanks you see in movies and TV are almost always Chieftain tanks with a modified turret.Bush did know about 9/11 about 1 hour beforehand.More people died in China during WW2 than in the Holocaust.The US and the Soviet Union agreed to pause the Cold War in case of an alien invasion.Cheese is the most stolen food in the world.Made in China stickers are made in South Korea.“Dammit I’m mad” is “Dammit I’m mad” spelled backwards.Sean Bean has a terrible fear of flying.You can only skydive out of a plane without a parachute once.Breast milk contains substances similar to marijuana.Rattlesnakes can bite you up to an hour after they’re dead.Horses can develop “wind sucking,” which is when they habitually suck in air and swallow it.The word slut was originally used to describe a woman who didn’t keep her room clean. “Oh the times, they are-a changin’!”Giant tarantulas sometimes keep small frogs as pets. Insects eat the tarantulas eggs, so the frog eats the insects, and in return the tarantula protects the frog.Take your age, subtract it by four, and that’s how old you were four years ago.Teens spend an average of 87 hours a year watching porn. “I’m uh, making my bed!” *Smack smack smack*

How do you figure out your current grade only with percentages?

Sorry to hear about that final exam grade.

You can multiply percentages, for instance a percentage representing a grade and another one representing its weight. It's usually easier to just convert them to decimal fractions for the purpose.

You've got
20% * 85% = 0.20 * 0.85 = 0.17
30% * 57.5% = 0.30 * 0.575 = 0.1725
25% * 85.8% = 0.25 * 0.858 = 0.2145
5% * 100% = 0.05 * 1 = 0.05
which gives you a total so far of 0.607 or 60.7% earned toward your final score.

(That's actually out of the 80% of the grade you can calculate, so it's an average of
60.7% / 80% = 75.675%
for the portion of your grade you have. But the 60.7% is the value that's useful for further calculation.)

If you get 100% on that big paper, you would wind up with a total of 80.7%. Obviously, if you get less, your total percentage is less; you'd have to multiply 20% times the score on that paper to figure out what you've got.

Unfortunately, that still doesn't tell us your grade unless we know how the percentages translate to letter grades. That can vary from school to school or from teacher to teacher, and in many cases depends on the rest of the class because the teacher assigns letter-grades to ranges determined by the distribution of the scores. (That's known as "grading on the curve.")

If you do know the cutoff score for a C, you could figure out what you need on that paper by subtracting your present score (60.7%), and multiplying the result by 5 (which reverses the 20% weight assigned that paper). For example:

If you need 75% for a C, you need
5(75% - 60.7%) = 5 * 14.3% = 71.5% on that paper.

If you only need 70% for a C, you need
5(70% - 60.7%) = 5 * 9.3% = 46.5% on that paper.

What percentage of the world's books (in English) is it possible to read in a lifetime?

Essentially 0, because people publish books faster than you can read them.But let’s avoid that by limiting it to books published this year or earlier. It’s still essentially 0. There have been 129,864,880 books published[1]. Of course, not all were in English, but let’s take a guess that 10% of those were. Let’s round down to 10,000,000.Now, if you read pretty quickly you might read a book a day. If you started reading at age 5 and live to 100, that’s about 30,000 books or about 0.3% of all the books.Footnotes[1] Google: There Are 129,864,880 Books in the Entire World

What’s the most useless map ever made?

Here are some of the maps that I believe should have a legendary status when it comes to being useless:Map to determine the risk of bear attacks:The Map which proves that North America is Gay:Potential EU leaving names:Map of the whole world at the crucifixion of Jesus:Europe according to Americans:Diagram of the geopolitical relationship in the middle east:Countries that use metric system vs countries that lose war to Vietnamese farmers:Map of Roman Air Bases in 2 century A.D:Map of the World according to Donald Trump:Taking a vacation from Trump vs Trump taking a vacation:The map that shows how huge the USA is:America according to the British:The area of each country is proportional to the number of times it was mentioned by Trump:How Facebook and other social media platforms react when a tragedy happens in each of the following locations:Images Sources:Terrible Maps (@TerribleMaps) | Twitterchangeyourgeography.blogspot.comWelcome to Enchanted Learning!

Christians is there a way I can into heaven even If I dont believe in god?

I help others, do community service, donated money for good causes never hurt or kill anyone animals or humans (just a few roaches and mosquitos here and there). I want to go to heaven but there's one catch I dont believe in god, he hasn't convince me that he really exist. Is there something else I can do??? Or do only people who believe go to heaven even if they done malicious things for example Michael Vick i'm sure everyone of u know who that is and yes he's Christian.

Essay help!!?

I'm sending two essays - combine the best points from each, then write it in your own words, and you're done!
Hope this helps! (Note: essay #2, below, is better than #1.)

(1) from:
www.megaessays.com/essay_search/Sandra...

Eleven: An Analysis of Sandra Cisneros
Sandra Cisneros’ story “Eleven” is a powerful piece about the struggle of Rachel on her eleventh birthday. On a day that is delightful for most, Rachel fights through her age and maturity to be understood, but she fails. Told from an easy to read and insightful first person innocent eye, “Eleven” contains simplistic diction and detail, accompanied by an odd organization to reveal the neglected and sad feelings of the eleven-year-old Rachel.

Throughout the story, Cisneros uses simple, broad language for Rachel’s thoughts and feelings. Rachel wishes that she was “one hundred and two” in order to tell the teacher that “the ugly sweater with red plastic buttons and a collar and sleeves all stretched our” was not hers.
“Eleven” by Sandra Cisneros gives the reader insight into the eleven-year-old girl’s thoughts and feelings. The reader interprets this as Rachel’s signal that she wishes she could stand up for herself.

Similarly, no one listens to Rachel when she claims it is not hers. On an unequal battlefield, adults dominate children; therefore, Rachel’s tears are her white flag because she can never compete against her teacher. She is being held back by the invisible parameter of age. She gives in to her younger maturity level and cries in frustration. The use of age numbers, starting at eleven and descending to one, begins and ends this story. These qualities are not often identified in young children, but Cisneros affectively entered the world of young children and produced an accurate insight into Rachel’s life. In other words, even though one is a certain age, a person is a composite of all their experiences.

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