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Sample Final Exam Questions (Mandatory Part)
Sample Final Exam Questions (Mandatory Part)

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MA 311: Exercises 1
MA 311: Exercises 1

... 1. Assume that there are nine billiard balls, four of them are black and the other five are colored blue, yellow, red, green, and orange. In how many ways can one choose five balls out of these nine (so that with respect to the black balls only their number is relevant)? 2. How many results are poss ...
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key words - DocuShare

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CSE596, Fall 2015 Problem Set 1 Due Wed. Sept. 16

... (1) Design a deterministic finite automaton with alphabet {0, 1} to recognize the language of binary numbers (in standard binary notation with leading zeroes allowed) that are multiples of 5. It is your choice whether you prefer to include the empty string λ in this language, or not—you must state y ...
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Ch 11 Patterns (WP)

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Book Question Set #1: Ertel, Chapter 2: Propositional Logic

... A statement of equivalence where, ‘A if and only if B’ 6.) What does it mean for two propositional formulas to be logically equivalent? If two propositional formulas are logically equivalent, they must evaluate to the same truth values for all interpretations. 7.) What does it mean for a logical for ...
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What is the empirical formula of the compound?

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Letter to the Editor

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Solving a Quadratic Equation

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MI4 PS06 - F16

... 8) Suppose that an isosceles triangle has two sides of length a and one side of length c. a. Find the area of the triangle in terms of a and c. Simplify as much as you can. b. A well-known formula for the area of a triangle is called Hero’s Formula. It is given by ...
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Geometric Sequence WS - Algebra with Mrs. Jett!

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Mathematics - Hackney New School

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Introduction to Linguistics - An

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Math Patterns - BakerMath.org

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Structural Ambiguity for English Teachers

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Evaluating Expressions

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Solve when r = 7 - Stoughton Public Schools

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EECS 203-1 – Winter 2002 Definitions review sheet

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Active learning exercise on Stirling numbers of the second kind

working out formula
working out formula

... We can then use the formula for a particular case. For example: to find the area of a room which is 5m long and 3m wide, we substitute the numbers for the letters in the formula. A = L x W ...
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Working Out Formulae

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Ambiguity



Ambiguity is a type of uncertainty of meaning in which several interpretations are plausible. It is thus an attribute of any idea or statement whose intended meaning cannot be definitively resolved according to a rule or process with a finite number of steps. (The ambi- part of the name reflects an idea of ""two"" as in two meanings.)The concept of ambiguity is generally contrasted with vagueness. In ambiguity, specific and distinct interpretations are permitted (although some may not be immediately apparent), whereas with information that is vague, it is difficult to form any interpretation at the desired level of specificity.Context may play a role in resolving ambiguity. For example, the same piece of information may be ambiguous in one context and unambiguous in another.
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