Mathematics Made Easy: Multiplication by 11
Hello! I shall be writing on how you can make your multiplication simpler and much more accurate. Now, I shall be starting with 11.
Hello! I shall be writing on how you can make your multiplication simpler and much more accurate. Now, I shall be starting with 11.
The mathematicians of ancient Greece attributed characters to numbers and awarded some of the status of perfection. For Euclid, one of the finding fathers of modern mathematics, a perfect number was one that equaled the sum of its own divisors – that is numbers that will divide into it without leaving a remainder. The first perfect number is 6: its divisors are 1, 2, and 3, 14 which add up to 6. The second is 28 (1 + two + four + seven + 14). The Greeks knew only two other perfect: 496 and 8,128.
Here is a list of some good websites that can aid your child’s Maths. Hope you find it useful.
Infinity = 2; Looks impossible, hard but can be solved logically even by 6th grader.