I've been using my calculator in class for the past couple of months and it suddenly turned to radical islam. I don't want to be stoned or excecuted because I may be gay according to my friends. What should I do?
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Huehuehuehue [spoiler]math jokes are funny [/spoiler]
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[quote] What should I do?[/quote]
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Can you watch chef on it though
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Allah Akbar
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Ti-84 plus? Nice. I have the color version
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Call the swat team. They could be able to get answers out of him
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But what is the square root of Islam?
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That calculator post from 2 years ago with the twin towers was better
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What happened, where did we go wrong
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[quote]What should I do?[/quote] Divide by zero.
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how does this post have thirty likes?
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I THOUGHT I SAVED YOU. I THREW THE ROPE INTO THE SHITPOST HOLE. WHY. YOU'VE GONE TOO DEEP.
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Well if you finish your equation you'll find out it's imaginary
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*insert pic of muslim on a skateboard with the text "radical islam" here*
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Try to feed it bacon. Maybe it'll run off.
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What's the image of?
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But hey! At least it's not a radical Catholic!
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Look on the bright side. It could have been a lot worse. It could have turned into a Radical Christian.
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Square Root of a Muslim = Radical Islam
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That reminds me of knee gers
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Edited by Guardian7477: 3/5/2017 9:45:45 PMWhen you hit enter it will say, "Muslim".
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Did you press enter? Is the answer irrational? [spoiler]The luckiest seven you will ever meet[/spoiler]
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Strap a bomb to it and throw it into a public school
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Do you look at logarithms and think "how the ƒµçk am I supposed to do this"? Look no further, because I am here to spread word of the [b]Triangle of Power[/b]. The Triangle of Power, named after its shape and purpose of representing exponents and related operations, allows you to easily visualize how exponents, roots, and logarithms are related! Normally, the three operations are written via position, a symbol, and a word respectively. This is stupid, because it takes 3 equations that say the same thing, and make them look completely different from one another. By using the Triangle of Power, you can much more easily visualize these sorts of equations by organizing them on a triangle. What's more, the locations of the terms on the triangle corresponds to their locations in each equation! Here's 2^3 = 8 represented on the power triangle. https://i.stack.imgur.com/TwIZQ.png . It's the exact same as what would be created by the equations 2 = 3√8 and 3 = log (2, 8). (Imagine the "3 =" on the line above the other half of the equation). Here are some properties expressed in Triangle of Power form: https://i.stack.imgur.com/yqT1g.png And here's the video that I learned this from: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sULa9Lc4pck
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Water board it to get to the truth.