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Extra Math Quotes & Sayings

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Top Extra Math Quotes

Extra Math Quotes By Alain De Botton

One has to go into relationships with equal expectations, ready to give as much as the other - not with one person wanting a fling and the other real love ... — Alain De Botton

Extra Math Quotes By Angela Morrison

I like your heart, Beth. When I found you on this bench, you opened it and swallowed
me. — Angela Morrison

Extra Math Quotes By Michael Ben Zehabe

Let's take some extra time to talk about one: Only the number one can create all numbers with this simple equation, 111111111 x 111111111 = 12345678987654321. One, expressed nine times, multiplied by itself, produces all subsequent numbers progressively and then inversely. Zero is not a number. — Michael Ben Zehabe

Extra Math Quotes By Rebecca Serle

I understand, now, that your own identity, your past, has nothing to do with the way others see you. Being a hero isn't about someone else's definition. Not Abigail's and not Constance's. Not the Post's. Not even Claire's. Being a hero is about one thing: the way you see yourself. — Rebecca Serle

Extra Math Quotes By Janette Rallison

So what were your favorite subjects in school?"
"School?" He leaned back in his chair as though he needed the extra space to think about it. "Probably math. It always made sense. Unlike English, economics, and girls."
"And exactly how do you plan on taking over the free world if you don't understand economics?"
"I'll hire advisers. I'll hire you, in fact."
"Okay. Let me know when your army of junior high zombies is ready. — Janette Rallison

Extra Math Quotes By Bruce Sterling

One of the great beauties of politics as an art form was its lack of restriction to merely standard forms of realism. — Bruce Sterling

Extra Math Quotes By Oliver Heaviside

As to the need of improvement there can be no question whilst the reign of Euclid continues. My own idea of a useful course is to begin with arithmetic, and then not Euclid but algebra. Next, not Euclid, but practical geometry, solid as well as plane; not demonstration, but to make acquaintance. Then not Euclid, but elementary vectors, conjoined with algebra, and applied to geometry. Addition first; then the scalar product. Elementary calculus should go on simultaneously, and come into vector algebraic geometry after a bit. Euclid might be an extra course for learned men, like Homer ... — Oliver Heaviside

Extra Math Quotes By H.J. Bellus

O to the M to the G! — H.J. Bellus