*The deep meaning:* "The full stop (Commonwealth English), period (North American English), or full point ., is a punctuation mark. It is used for several purposes, most often to mark the end of a declarative sentence (as distinguished from a question or exclamation). This sentence-ending use, alone, defines the strictest sense of full stop. Although full stop technically applies only when the mark is used to end a sentence, the distinction - drawn since at least 1897[1] - is not maintained by all modern style guides and dictionaries. . Full stop or Period In UnicodeU+002E . FULL STOP HTML . The mark is also used, singly, to indicate omitted characters or, in a series, as an ellipsis (…), to indicate omitted words. It may be placed after an initial letter used to stand for a name or after each individual letter in an initialism or acronym (e.g., "U.S.A."). However, the use of full stops after letters in an initialism or acronym is declining, and many of these without punctuation have become accepted norms (e.g., "UK" and "NATO"). This trend has progressed somewhat more slowly in the United States than in other English language dialects. A full stop is frequently used at the end of word abbreviations - in British usage, primarily truncations like Rev., but not after contractions like Revd (in American English it is used in both cases). In the English-speaking world, a punctuation mark identical to the full stop is used as the decimal separator and for other purposes, and may be called a point. In computing, it is called a dot.[2] It is sometimes called a baseline dot to distinguish it from the interpunct (or middle dot).[2][3] History Ancient Greek origin The full stop symbol derives from the Greek punctuation introduced by Aristophanes of Byzantium in the 3rd century bce. In his system, there were a series of dots whose placement determined their meaning. stigmḕ teleía, stigmḕ mésē and hypostigmḕ The full stop at the end of a completed thought or expression was marked by a high dot ⟨˙⟩, called the stigmḕ teleía (στιγμὴ τελεία) or "terminal dot". The "middle dot" ⟨·⟩, the stigmḕ mésē (στιγμὴ μέση), marked a division in a thought occasioning a longer breath (essentially a semicolon), while the low dot ⟨.⟩, called the hypostigmḕ (ὑποστιγμή) or "underdot", marked a division in a thought occasioning a shorter breath (essentially a comma).[4] Medieval simplification In practice, scribes mostly employed the terminal dot; the others fell out of use and were later replaced by other symbols. From the 9th century onwards, the full stop began appearing as a low mark (instead of a high one), and by the time printing began in Western Europe, the lower dot was regular and then universal.[4] Medieval Latin and modern English period The name period is first attested (as the Latin loanword peridos) in Ælfric of Eynsham's Old English treatment on grammar. There, it is distinguished from the full stop (the distinctio), and continues the Greek underdot's earlier function as a comma between phrases.[5] It shifted its meaning, to a dot marking a full stop, in the works of the 16th-century grammarians.[5] In 19th-century texts, both British English and American English were consistent in their usage of the terms period and full stop.[6][1] The word period was used as a name for what printers often called the "full point", the punctuation mark that was a dot on the baseline and used in several situations. The phrase full stop was only used to refer to the punctuation mark when it was used to terminate a sentence.[1] This terminological distinction seems to be eroding. For example, the 1998 edition of Fowler's Modern English Usage used full point for the mark used after an abbreviation, but full stop or full point when it was employed at the end of a sentence;[7] the 2015 edition, however, treats them as synonymous (and prefers full stop),[8] and New Hart's Rules does likewise (but prefers full point).[9] In 1989, the last edition (1989) of the original Hart's Rules (before it became The Oxford Guide to Style in 2002) exclusively used full point.[10] Usage Full stops are the most commonly used punctuation marks; analysis of texts indicate that approximately half of all punctuation marks used are full stops.[11][12] Ending sentences Full stops indicate the end of sentences that are not questions or exclamations. After initials It is usual in North American English to use full stops after initials; e.g. A. A. Milne,[13] George W. Bush.[14] British usage is less strict.[15] A few style guides discourage full stops after initials.[16][17] However, there is a general trend and initiatives to spell out names in full instead of abbreviating them in order to avoid ambiguity.[18][19][20] Abbreviations A full stop is used after some abbreviations.[21] If the abbreviation ends a declaratory sentence there is no additional period immediately following the full stop that ends the abbreviation (e.g. "My name is Gabriel Gama, Jr."). Though two full stops (one for the abbreviation, one for the sentence ending) might be expected, conventionally only one is written. This is an intentional omission, and thus not haplography, which is unintentional omission of a duplicate. In the case of an interrogative or exclamatory sentence ending with an abbreviation, a question or exclamation mark can still be added (e.g. "Are you Gabriel Gama Jr.?").[citation needed] Abbreviations and personal titles of address Further information: Abbreviation § Periods (full stops) and spaces According to the Oxford A-Z of Grammar and Punctuation, "If the abbreviation includes both the first and last letter of the abbreviated word, as in 'Mister' ['Mr'] and 'Doctor' ['Dr'], a full stop is not used."[22][better source needed][23] This does not include, for example, the standard abbreviations for titles such as Professor ("Prof.") or Reverend ("Rev."), because they do not end with the last letter of the word they are abbreviating. In American English, the common convention is to include the period after all such abbreviations.[23] Acronyms and initialisms In acronyms and initialisms, the modern style is generally to not use full points after each initial (e.g.: DNA, UK, USSR). The punctuation is somewhat more often used in American English, most commonly with U.S. and U.S.A. in particular. However, this depends much upon the house style of a particular writer or publisher.[24] As some examples from American style guides, The Chicago Manual of Style (primarily for book and academic-journal publishing) deprecates the use of full points in acronyms, including U.S.,[25] while The Associated Press Stylebook (primarily for journalism) dispenses with full points in acronyms except for certain two-letter cases, including U.S., U.K., and U.N., but not EU.[26]" _(And so on...)_
Imagine this as a room in the backrooms or some shit, you’re in a room with people who are all identical and act in unison and are maths geniuses. The only way you can leave is to solve the equation before the bell rings where everyone disappears and failure means you have wait a whole day to try again. The room is also bright as shit
happened to me today, i wasn't taught half of the things in maths and had a test in the morning, didn't know half of it and felt sick, spat blood, they made me do it still 😃
my teacher is amazing compared to this, shes literally like a therapist, explains everything, answers our questions even if they have nothing to do with math, tells us exactly how many questions and what they’ll be asking on review day (like, 6 q on dadada, 4 on dadada, ect), gives us answer keys, grades homework on completion, and offers tutoring during homeroom
same, even tho I'm only a 5th grader, I'm still great that my math teacher explains the subject of the math, and our subject in math right now is rounded to/round off and tbh- IT'S GONNA CHANGE AND WILL PUT MULTIPLICATION, ADDITION, SUBTRACTION AND MF DIVISI-
This is literally the funniest description of what adhd basically can do and the dude doesn't even know that this is very similar to how people with adhd feel in clas
My math class be like: Me: blinks Teacher: alright we will have 72 quizzes, 14 chapter tests, 2 term tests and 2 term exams for the coming days, good luck to all!
The issue I have with math is not that the teacher didn’t teach the content of a test, but the way the test is structured requires us to use everything we learned all at once, like using binomial expansion in a logarithmic function or something like that. Of course, in the actual application of mathematics it is important to know how to use everything you learned as needed, since you are seldom going to use just one topic from one unit of your math class to solve a problem.
The thing about math is, you have to listen to every word the teacher says. If you don't understand something, you won't understand anything after that. So better get it into your head soon.
@@emperor9413 Then raise your hand and ask him to explain it. If he doesn't do it a few times, go to the principal and tell him. Here in germany, the teachers have the obligation to teach every student everything they need to know, and answer every relevant question as best as they can. Don't know what the rule is in your country.
@@lennelis Well, sometimes you gotta ask stupid questions to become smarter. I'd personally rather look stupid but actually get smarter every day, instead of looking smart but actually being stupid. Plus, if you laugh it off, most people will at least think you're funny.
yeah i really hated when they made us do the standard model lagrangian in highschool math. that unit was probably one of the worst, along with the quantum gravity one and the one where we had to solve all of physics
Math was always the subject I struggled most with and when I got a C at Level 5 Applications I was pretty happy (every other grade was a B & 1 A so this was my worst score but I was just happy I passed and ironically enough I was one of the few students who passed that class with most others failing due to multiple factors such as the class always being noisy and the teacher being bad at controlling it and explaining her ideas with my understanding mostly coming from her teaching me directly.)
Meanwhiles my math teacher : *lets me do my math work alone without teaching me anything, answers questions that the class asks and give us extra work* Me : BEST MATH CLASS EVER Also me : yo bestie wanna draw ? We’ll look like we’re actually doing work Me when my friend needs help : *gives 1 hour long explanation and finally get to the answer*
i remember my 4th grade class getting a low grade on the test, so we were allowed to retake it. the other teacher taught too fast, but he frequently asked us if we understood.
On my last year of school i dont even worry about math, i dont know is there any person in the world, who cant fully understand math under ANY circumstances. Nah men im a 100% humanitarian
I remember one time in 6th grade I legit fell asleep during math class My math teacher realized I was sleeping when he called on me 5 times and I didn’t respond
I was so happy that my teacher started to play this in class and was like “this ain’t gonna be my math class. let’s continue.”
Minor spelling mistake
I don’t really care but to avoid more people saying this, I’ll fix it
teacher sounds like a G
She is 😎
Tell yo teacher I said hi lol
When you are not even halfway down with the test, and everyone else is complete.
That feeling hits different
And I know it considering I got a 70 on test yesterday
Always happens
Especially when it's not even halfway through the time necessary.
Story of my life 🥲
You forgot the part where he goes from basic math to calculus
AH YES (Senior Highschool lifes)
The Pre-calculus & Basic Calculus (They're the 2nd version of Algebra Subject)
Math isn’t that bad compared to Language Arts. Teacher be like “The period at the end of this sentence has a very deep meaning.”
*The deep meaning:*
"The full stop (Commonwealth English), period (North American English), or full point ., is a punctuation mark. It is used for several purposes, most often to mark the end of a declarative sentence (as distinguished from a question or exclamation). This sentence-ending use, alone, defines the strictest sense of full stop. Although full stop technically applies only when the mark is used to end a sentence, the distinction - drawn since at least 1897[1] - is not maintained by all modern style guides and dictionaries.
.
Full stop or Period
In UnicodeU+002E . FULL STOP
HTML .
The mark is also used, singly, to indicate omitted characters or, in a series, as an ellipsis (…), to indicate omitted words. It may be placed after an initial letter used to stand for a name or after each individual letter in an initialism or acronym (e.g., "U.S.A."). However, the use of full stops after letters in an initialism or acronym is declining, and many of these without punctuation have become accepted norms (e.g., "UK" and "NATO"). This trend has progressed somewhat more slowly in the United States than in other English language dialects.
A full stop is frequently used at the end of word abbreviations - in British usage, primarily truncations like Rev., but not after contractions like Revd (in American English it is used in both cases).
In the English-speaking world, a punctuation mark identical to the full stop is used as the decimal separator and for other purposes, and may be called a point. In computing, it is called a dot.[2] It is sometimes called a baseline dot to distinguish it from the interpunct (or middle dot).[2][3]
History
Ancient Greek origin
The full stop symbol derives from the Greek punctuation introduced by Aristophanes of Byzantium in the 3rd century bce. In his system, there were a series of dots whose placement determined their meaning.
stigmḕ teleía, stigmḕ mésē and hypostigmḕ
The full stop at the end of a completed thought or expression was marked by a high dot ⟨˙⟩, called the stigmḕ teleía (στιγμὴ τελεία) or "terminal dot". The "middle dot" ⟨·⟩, the stigmḕ mésē (στιγμὴ μέση), marked a division in a thought occasioning a longer breath (essentially a semicolon), while the low dot ⟨.⟩, called the hypostigmḕ (ὑποστιγμή) or "underdot", marked a division in a thought occasioning a shorter breath (essentially a comma).[4]
Medieval simplification
In practice, scribes mostly employed the terminal dot; the others fell out of use and were later replaced by other symbols. From the 9th century onwards, the full stop began appearing as a low mark (instead of a high one), and by the time printing began in Western Europe, the lower dot was regular and then universal.[4]
Medieval Latin and modern English period
The name period is first attested (as the Latin loanword peridos) in Ælfric of Eynsham's Old English treatment on grammar. There, it is distinguished from the full stop (the distinctio), and continues the Greek underdot's earlier function as a comma between phrases.[5] It shifted its meaning, to a dot marking a full stop, in the works of the 16th-century grammarians.[5] In 19th-century texts, both British English and American English were consistent in their usage of the terms period and full stop.[6][1] The word period was used as a name for what printers often called the "full point", the punctuation mark that was a dot on the baseline and used in several situations. The phrase full stop was only used to refer to the punctuation mark when it was used to terminate a sentence.[1] This terminological distinction seems to be eroding. For example, the 1998 edition of Fowler's Modern English Usage used full point for the mark used after an abbreviation, but full stop or full point when it was employed at the end of a sentence;[7] the 2015 edition, however, treats them as synonymous (and prefers full stop),[8] and New Hart's Rules does likewise (but prefers full point).[9] In 1989, the last edition (1989) of the original Hart's Rules (before it became The Oxford Guide to Style in 2002) exclusively used full point.[10]
Usage
Full stops are the most commonly used punctuation marks; analysis of texts indicate that approximately half of all punctuation marks used are full stops.[11][12]
Ending sentences
Full stops indicate the end of sentences that are not questions or exclamations.
After initials
It is usual in North American English to use full stops after initials; e.g. A. A. Milne,[13] George W. Bush.[14] British usage is less strict.[15] A few style guides discourage full stops after initials.[16][17] However, there is a general trend and initiatives to spell out names in full instead of abbreviating them in order to avoid ambiguity.[18][19][20]
Abbreviations
A full stop is used after some abbreviations.[21] If the abbreviation ends a declaratory sentence there is no additional period immediately following the full stop that ends the abbreviation (e.g. "My name is Gabriel Gama, Jr."). Though two full stops (one for the abbreviation, one for the sentence ending) might be expected, conventionally only one is written. This is an intentional omission, and thus not haplography, which is unintentional omission of a duplicate. In the case of an interrogative or exclamatory sentence ending with an abbreviation, a question or exclamation mark can still be added (e.g. "Are you Gabriel Gama Jr.?").[citation needed]
Abbreviations and personal titles of address
Further information: Abbreviation § Periods (full stops) and spaces
According to the Oxford A-Z of Grammar and Punctuation, "If the abbreviation includes both the first and last letter of the abbreviated word, as in 'Mister' ['Mr'] and 'Doctor' ['Dr'], a full stop is not used."[22][better source needed][23] This does not include, for example, the standard abbreviations for titles such as Professor ("Prof.") or Reverend ("Rev."), because they do not end with the last letter of the word they are abbreviating.
In American English, the common convention is to include the period after all such abbreviations.[23]
Acronyms and initialisms
In acronyms and initialisms, the modern style is generally to not use full points after each initial (e.g.: DNA, UK, USSR). The punctuation is somewhat more often used in American English, most commonly with U.S. and U.S.A. in particular. However, this depends much upon the house style of a particular writer or publisher.[24] As some examples from American style guides, The Chicago Manual of Style (primarily for book and academic-journal publishing) deprecates the use of full points in acronyms, including U.S.,[25] while The Associated Press Stylebook (primarily for journalism) dispenses with full points in acronyms except for certain two-letter cases, including U.S., U.K., and U.N., but not EU.[26]" _(And so on...)_
@@RuyVuusen Typed or (ctrl+c)+(ctrl+v)?
@Ruy Vuusen .
@@TypicaIMarksman Of course it's Wikipedia, I thought it was obvious.
@@RuyVuusen periooood
Imagine this as a room in the backrooms or some shit, you’re in a room with people who are all identical and act in unison and are maths geniuses. The only way you can leave is to solve the equation before the bell rings where everyone disappears and failure means you have wait a whole day to try again. The room is also bright as shit
That would be a worse hell than being in a black void for all the eternity
Bro this idea is so good, the fact that you won't get into real world until you could pass a really difficult math class
I think I remember it in the Backrooms Wiki once
hey at least you have a chance
maybe in a million years
Korean here. Sounds like just a normal school day. Although I'm an adult with a job by now.
Bro you need way more popularity, this video is so funny and your editing skills are the best!
Thanks person, big appreciate
@@Mythical_Bubble You deserve it, I am trying to make sketch videos that are also like yours, you give me inspiration!
@@sparwhal yo no way, it’s hard to find people who do these types of vids
@@Mythical_Bubble Yea haha, youtube is different these days
Fr
2:18 Perfectly Cuts Screams (Mythical Bubble Edition) That Part Was Really Funny, Keep Up The Great Work!
happened to me today, i wasn't taught half of the things in maths and had a test in the morning, didn't know half of it and felt sick, spat blood, they made me do it still 😃
Welcome to ehh USA?
@@derp5958 UK academies
Welcome to asia where you have to expect to learn nothing from the teachers
@@kouu5485 are you implying that doesn't happen outside of Asia?
@@YoshiAteTooManyYoshiCookies no
What they teach you: 🤍
What is in the test: 🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍🤍
"miss I need help"
"ok-.. It says, 'who is geography?' "
"that doesnt even make sense-isnt this a math test?"
"mhmm, keep think about that one"
you forgot the part where the smart kid goes "Ooo this is so easy" 💀
my teacher is amazing compared to this, shes literally like a therapist, explains everything, answers our questions even if they have nothing to do with math, tells us exactly how many questions and what they’ll be asking on review day (like, 6 q on dadada, 4 on dadada, ect), gives us answer keys, grades homework on completion, and offers tutoring during homeroom
This sounds exactly like my biology teacher. She helps us out a lot
@Hyper Bloke How is it spoon feeding? Only thing I can see as that is the answer key, everything else seems like just assistance in understanding.
same, even tho I'm only a 5th grader, I'm still great that my math teacher explains the subject of the math, and our subject in math right now is rounded to/round off and tbh- IT'S GONNA CHANGE AND WILL PUT MULTIPLICATION, ADDITION, SUBTRACTION AND MF DIVISI-
@@_H0shii.K Kids trying not to reveal their age on the internet (impossible)
Same
This guy is probably one of the best sketch makers I’ve seen-
He needs WAYYYY more popularity (:
This is literally the funniest description of what adhd basically can do and the dude doesn't even know that this is very similar to how people with adhd feel in clas
I have a.d.d but the teacher never notices me VERY OBVIOUSLY listening to my sony headset.
How is this man not super famous??? He deserves to be a prominent
It's takes days to get a decent amount of views and sometimes people have different taste
This looks for kids
My math class be like:
Me: blinks
Teacher: alright we will have 72 quizzes, 14 chapter tests, 2 term tests and 2 term exams for the coming days, good luck to all!
1:40 bro the kid literally learned the secrets of the multiverse in one match class
you’re so underrated, you deserve way more attention! you give me a lot of inspiration and one day i hope i can someday make sketches/skits!
We didn’t learn this
Teacher: you should’ve learnt it last year!
Last year:
Teacher: Your gonna learn it next year
It’s so accurate 😂
Underatted youtuber Ngl. I love your videos!
The students saying I'm done is funny!
00:39 thats literally me) if i sleep not enough, i would feel myself fine on any other subject but on math im using all my strengh just to stay awake
I can't explain how relatable this is
0:12 bro looks like the Baldi basics princapal
I wonder if everyone at least once in their life the teacher says, “any questions” and when your raising your hand they don’t even notice you
the teacher never calls on people when they raise they're hand so true
The issue I have with math is not that the teacher didn’t teach the content of a test, but the way the test is structured requires us to use everything we learned all at once, like using binomial expansion in a logarithmic function or something like that. Of course, in the actual application of mathematics it is important to know how to use everything you learned as needed, since you are seldom going to use just one topic from one unit of your math class to solve a problem.
pov : you go to the science fair….
The thing about math is, you have to listen to every word the teacher says. If you don't understand something, you won't understand anything after that. So better get it into your head soon.
See this guy is speaking faxx
Half of the time my math teacher doesn't even explain 💀
@@emperor9413 Then raise your hand and ask him to explain it. If he doesn't do it a few times, go to the principal and tell him. Here in germany, the teachers have the obligation to teach every student everything they need to know, and answer every relevant question as best as they can. Don't know what the rule is in your country.
@@grillpig3860im scared to ask cus i don't want my classmates thinking im a fu##ing idiot lol
@@lennelis Well, sometimes you gotta ask stupid questions to become smarter. I'd personally rather look stupid but actually get smarter every day, instead of looking smart but actually being stupid. Plus, if you laugh it off, most people will at least think you're funny.
yeah i really hated when they made us do the standard model lagrangian in highschool math. that unit was probably one of the worst, along with the quantum gravity one and the one where we had to solve all of physics
the test didn't even have a question, it was just the lagrangian :p
Gotta love when the test is literally the Standard Model
Just wait for the general lagrangian density including the effects of gravitational force
CONGRATS ON 50K WOOOOOOOOOOOO
Found you on Tiktok. You are so underrated, you deserve a lot more subs
Me thinking I'm good and math, and join a Major in Math:
Me thinking engineering would just require me to be in workshop :
0:42 As a student who studies math in school, I confirm that blinking in math lessons is illegal.
0:01 def me in class
Which one?
My math teacher played this in class. This is the best thing that has ever happened to me at school, ever.
And then everyone else turns into nerds that somehow keep up with the speed of the notes
I like how they used differential equations. The hardest math.
The best skit channel ever
Wow! That is relatable! Also
Idea: Your trying to find a good idea for video but you can’t the right one
And then theres that one unit where its just extremely easy
“show your work” in math has the same connotation as “explain your answer in English”
why is this relatable
He is so relatable get this man to 100k! He deserves it !
DUDE THIS IS HILARIOUS, YOU'RE SO UNDERRATED
"blah blah blah math math math" when the guy blinks got me lmao
Idea: POV: Dreams be like
(ex. when you walk and somehow end up in a whole other country xD)
the uber kids cracked me up 💀
Your videos get better everyday LOL
Thanks Elian!
As soon as I saw this in my recommended I knew I had to click on it. So relatable
For me, this is relatable in Science class.. 😭😭
This is the most accurate skit I've ever watched
When the kid answered the longest answer ever I heard superfragileisticeshdebaladoshist wait I swear I didn’t go to the dictionary
School work: 2+2=4
Homework: 5x3+6=21
Warm up: algebra
Exam: a^2 + b^2 = c^2
Test: standard model langrangian
This is golden xD deserves a sub!
Math was always the subject I struggled most with and when I got a C at Level 5 Applications I was pretty happy (every other grade was a B & 1 A so this was my worst score but I was just happy I passed and ironically enough I was one of the few students who passed that class with most others failing due to multiple factors such as the class always being noisy and the teacher being bad at controlling it and explaining her ideas with my understanding mostly coming from her teaching me directly.)
this is completely true for me
How did you make 2 minutes feel like an eternity!?
One second, you're learning addition, and then the next second, you're learning rocket science.
BRO WHY IS THIS SO TRUE
Our Math Teacher is rlly good at teaching, but the problem is that some things on the exam wasnt even in the discussion-
As someone, who studys math at university I can confirm this is true😅
The periodic table on the right of whiteboard is best. Although I can't read the full names of elements but it's hilarious
This is the most relatable thing I have ever seen but I sit in the front row
This makes Math 10 times better than it already is.
Meanwhiles my math teacher : *lets me do my math work alone without teaching me anything, answers questions that the class asks and give us extra work*
Me : BEST MATH CLASS EVER
Also me : yo bestie wanna draw ? We’ll look like we’re actually doing work
Me when my friend needs help : *gives 1 hour long explanation and finally get to the answer*
I'm glad everyone is open about their suffering during my math class.
It's always "Test on friday" this is soo relatable 😭
“You didn’t teach us this.” Literally the whole class when we take a test
0:01 i likenhow they r all lil Jimmy's except for the kid in the back right corner
I think math is very interesting lol, but this is still absolutely hilarious.
Poor kid. Teacher doesn't want him to tell his opinion
video Idea: Pov: You go to a kid's birthday party
Video idea: POV: You study Geography
That one kid in math be like when the teacher hasn’t even started the question: “ I’m done”
Orginal: nutshell mine: nuts-hell
Underrated alert
Video idea: when your mom says “it’s time to go” at a party
THAT’ ME EXCEPT DAY 2
Slice of life thriller content
Seems accurate
Underrated this ur so funny
Ive had a pretty good track record so far on math, hope I don't ever get a class like this
0:35 I swear I can hear someone whispering "stanley" for 25 seconds
whenever i ask for help my math teacher tells me to look at my notes, doesnt even say anything else
Why is this so relatable 😭
At least it isn’t computer science, my teacher wants us to write 10 paragraphs in a hour and 13 minutes
ur in a job interview
Ceo:whats the most impossible thing to obtain
me:getting a good grade in math
Ceo:correct! u got a job
One of the best TH-camrs
THIS SHIT RELATED ASF YOU NEED MORE VIEWS
If a^2+3=19% times a, where ABC is a right angle, calculate the mass of the sun.
Video idea
POV: the weird kid is sitting next to you at lunch
I can confirm this is very accurate
i remember my 4th grade class getting a low grade on the test, so we were allowed to retake it.
the other teacher taught too fast, but he frequently asked us if we understood.
teacher always be like:today we r learning math students:but we got 2 seconds of class another student:done
On my last year of school i dont even worry about math, i dont know is there any person in the world, who cant fully understand math under ANY circumstances. Nah men im a 100% humanitarian
I remember one time in 6th grade I legit fell asleep during math class
My math teacher realized I was sleeping when he called on me 5 times and I didn’t respond
thank you for doing my request
Ye, also congrats on starting a new playlist and channel topic too
@@Mythical_Bubble heh thanks
This is why i'm glad math is my final period.