incredible or what? Go back and look again!!
Anyone who counts all 6 "F's" on the first go is a genius
Three is normal, four is quite rare
Well, shame on me. Even on the second reading I didn't pick up a single 'of'.lol, I got 5, missed the last OF for some reason
Well, shame on me. Even on the second reading I didn't pick up a single 'of'.
Can I blame my habit of reading fast, rather than imminent Alzheimers?
It so happens the brain records every sense from the early stages of existence to the end of it's function. From womb to death. It is truly a memory bank of all life experiences. The greatest gig of all is not being able to access these records at will.According to the latest studies, sight is 50% memory. There is simply no way you can look at something & actually be 'seeing' everything. Your brain just can't process it all, so to help itself out it takes shortcuts. So really it's no wonder we all make mistakes and skip over errors.
It so happens the brain records every sense from the early stages of existence to the end of it's function. From womb to death. It is truly a memory bank of all life experiences. The greatest gig of all is not being able to access these records at will.
Neither.Are you agreeing or disagreeing with the studies?
The greatest mystery of all is why we are not able to access these records at will.The greatest gig? I don't follow the English here I'm afraid.
Ov course the reason is ov no connection to Alzheimers Disease. When we read we hear the words.
Whoops! You are absolutely right. I just hate it when I make those mistakes! Even though I read my post before submitting it, I did not notice. Smack on the hand accepted with due humility. Thank you for noticing.
Ruby
So true. Although sometimes I wonder if maybe the 'don't care' attitude is really a defensiveness.Ruby, I feel for you, but remember it is only those of us who love the English language who are embarrassed when we make a mistake in grammar or spelling. Most don't care.
Sorry if this has already been said but 1 is not a prime number. Their ... sorry ... there are only 4 primes less than 10.
I think you may have strayed on to the wrong thread.
My comment was directed at the first post on this thread which included 1 as a prime number. Trivial, I know, but I'm a Maths teacher and couldn't help myself.
:topicMy comment was directed at the first post on this thread which included 1 as a prime number. Trivial, I know, but I'm a Maths teacher and couldn't help myself.
Yes it might be best to avoid having a Math's debate.I have to congratulate you on due diligence. Welcome aboard.
My comment was directed at the first post on this thread which included 1 as a prime number. Trivial, I know, but I'm a Maths teacher and couldn't help myself.
On 7 June 1742, the Prussian mathematician Christian Goldbach wrote a letter to Leonhard Euler ....
Every integer greater than 2 can be written as the sum of three primes.
He considered 1 to be a prime number, a convention subsequently abandoned.[4]
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