Calculus 2 was College course i took, Its was so easy to pass Not it was H on day one, but Cal-3 is easy because it goes into 3-d dimensions. but i was lost when you askk me what math book i was in
There was a groundhog( woodchuck) in my yard a couple of weeks ago. Didn't see it chucking any wood though...
Based on the density of pine (33lbs/cubic foot) and the fact that groundhogs cannot fly, the exact amount with correct significant digits will never be known. However, through decades of research and billions of well spent tax dollars, it has been hypothesized that a woodchuck can, in fact, chuck approximately 10lbs of cedar per day, unless Chuck Norris says otherwise. *Note: The gravitational pull of Mars was not included in these estimates. Thus, the results may be skewed by 15.642876%
Woodchucks can't chuck wood, they toss wooden planks therefore making the question inanswerable. If woodchucks could chuck instead of toss times the square root of the mass of the moon subtracted by the density of IceCreamCow's poop (which is ice cream), nanonize that by the triangle root of how many air molecules there are on the Earth, subtract that by the number of people on EMC, add the number of chest hairs on JustinGuy divide that by the amount of how much this is confusing you, you get 42. Its 42 DaJaKoe. HAPPY? That took 2 days too write the whole equation all together. And yes, this is quite a tad bit overkill. But I don't care. Satisfied?
So basically all that is this: Woodchucks can't chuck wood, they toss wooden planks therefore making the question inanswerable. If woodchucks could chuck instead of toss times the square root of the mass of the moon subtracted by the density of IceCreamCow's poop (which is ice cream), nanonize that by the triangle root of how many air molecules there are on the Earth, subtract that by the number of people on EMC, add the number of chest hairs on JustinGuy divide that by the amount of how much this is confusing you, you get 42. Its 42 DaJaKoe. HAPPY? That took 2 days too write the whole equation all together. And yes, this is quite a tad bit overkill. But I don't care. Satisfied?