Originally posted by: dnetmhz
What row of numbers comes next?
1
11
21
1211
111221
312211
13112221
the answer will have probably been revealed by the time my slowass computer submits the reply, but here goes: 1113213211
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
What row of numbers comes next?
1
11
21
1211
111221
312211
13112221
Originally posted by: Izzo
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
What row of numbers comes next?
1
11
21
1211
111221
312211
13112221
the answer will have probably been revealed by the time my slowass computer submits the reply, but here goes: 1113213211
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
Originally posted by: Izzo
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
What row of numbers comes next?
1
11
21
1211
111221
312211
13112221
the answer will have probably been revealed by the time my slowass computer submits the reply, but here goes: 1113213211
you got it!
Originally posted by: MegaloManiaK
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
Originally posted by: Izzo
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
What row of numbers comes next?
1
11
21
1211
111221
312211
13112221
the answer will have probably been revealed by the time my slowass computer submits the reply, but here goes: 1113213211
you got it!
I dont get it. Is it a pattern?
pattern riddles makes head hurt...Originally posted by: dnetmhz
Originally posted by: MegaloManiaK
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
What row of numbers comes next?
1
11
21
1211
111221
312211
13112221
The eighth row?
You said what row comes next, not what sequence of numbers?
no taking the easy way out mister!
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
ok, here is an easy one
I have holes on the top and bottom.
I have holes on my left and on my right.
And I have holes in the middle, yet I still hold water.
What am I?
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
ok, here is an easy one
I have holes on the top and bottom.
I have holes on my left and on my right.
And I have holes in the middle, yet I still hold water.
What am I?
Originally posted by: hoyaguru
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
ok, here is an easy one
I have holes on the top and bottom.
I have holes on my left and on my right.
And I have holes in the middle, yet I still hold water.
What am I?
A sponge
She slid it under a doorSally and her younger brother were fighting. Their mother was tired of the fighting, and
decided to punish them by making them stand on the same piece of newspaper in such a way that they couldn't touch each other. How did she accomplish this?
Originally posted by: Spooner
If EELS + MARK + BEST + WARY = EASY
What does HELP + BARK + WARD + LEAD equal?
Originally posted by: Spooner
She slid it under a doorSally and her younger brother were fighting. Their mother was tired of the fighting, and
decided to punish them by making them stand on the same piece of newspaper in such a way that they couldn't touch each other. How did she accomplish this?
Originally posted by: Spooner
If Susan is 10, Arabella is 20, and Jim and Neal are both 5, but
Richard is 10, how much is Jennifer by the same system?
close, but wrong logicOriginally posted by: dnetmhz
20? I'm assuming it goes by the # of letters in the name?Originally posted by: Spooner
If Susan is 10, Arabella is 20, and Jim and Neal are both 5, but
Richard is 10, how much is Jennifer by the same system?
Originally posted by: Spooner
close, but wrong logicOriginally posted by: dnetmhz
20? I'm assuming it goes by the # of letters in the name?Originally posted by: Spooner
If Susan is 10, Arabella is 20, and Jim and Neal are both 5, but
Richard is 10, how much is Jennifer by the same system?
your logic doesn't even fit the scenario
Originally posted by: Spooner
close, but wrong logicOriginally posted by: dnetmhz
20? I'm assuming it goes by the # of letters in the name?Originally posted by: Spooner
If Susan is 10, Arabella is 20, and Jim and Neal are both 5, but
Richard is 10, how much is Jennifer by the same system?
your logic doesn't even fit the scenario
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
Originally posted by: Spooner
close, but wrong logicOriginally posted by: dnetmhz
20? I'm assuming it goes by the # of letters in the name?Originally posted by: Spooner
If Susan is 10, Arabella is 20, and Jim and Neal are both 5, but
Richard is 10, how much is Jennifer by the same system?
your logic doesn't even fit the scenario
it could given ranges of lengths related to points
Originally posted by: Spooner
15 is right, it's based on syllables.
You have two hourglasses--a 4-minute glass and a 7-minute glass.
You want to measure 9 minutes. How do you do it?
Originally posted by: Goth
Originally posted by: Spooner
15 is right, it's based on syllables.
You have two hourglasses--a 4-minute glass and a 7-minute glass.
You want to measure 9 minutes. How do you do it?
Start both at the same time. Once the 4 minute glass is empty, there are 3 minutes remaining in the 7 minute one. Repeat two additional times.
Probably not the answer, but that's a way to get 9 minutes
Originally posted by: dnetmhz
Originally posted by: Goth
Originally posted by: Spooner
15 is right, it's based on syllables.
You have two hourglasses--a 4-minute glass and a 7-minute glass.
You want to measure 9 minutes. How do you do it?
Start both at the same time. Once the 4 minute glass is empty, there are 3 minutes remaining in the 7 minute one. Repeat two additional times.
Probably not the answer, but that's a way to get 9 minutes
you didn't account for getting the 7 minute glass reset.