Are you still thinking about the answer to that riddle? The answer is the same if the question is for a leap year, because a leap year just means February has 29 days instead of The seconds are still the same. However, if you took the time to calculate the number of seconds in terms of 60 seconds per minute, then that answer should be accepted too.
In a non-leap year, the answer would be seconds. So if you went through all that trouble, your answer should count too. Do you love a good and challenging riddle? Are you pleased if you can work it out? We really recommend that you share riddles with your children and family. Riddles are not just fun but also more than this they are beneficial for children than you might first imagine and maybe in more ways than you might ever expect too! Riddles make people laugh out loud.
As we all know that laughter is the best thing for relaxing the brain and body, helping us encouraging positive mental health, release stress. Riddles help people to bond with each other, when we are working out riddles together we become a team on a giant search.
Riddles is also a wonderful challenge which can help children to motivate and continue studying and working. They are likely to learn new words and new ways to use them, subliminally learning rhythm and rhyming.
Be sure to share this awesome riddle with your family and friends on social media to see if they can answer it. If you used Scott says November 3, Hoova says December 19, How about the second of every month as well as the 22nd of every month adding up to 24 seconds.
Jusy says January 11, Dan says January 12, Could you show your work? If you did the calculation, it would be:.
Warren says February 18, How many seconds are there in a year? Rayhan says March 17, Dan says March 28, Kevin says April 24, Jay says May 9, Darlington Obinna says May 11, Allen says May 11, All of these answers are correct.
There are 31,, seconds in a standard year, 31,, seconds in a leap year, approximately 31,, seconds in a solar year.
Just because the questioner had a different response in mind does not change the fact that ALL of the above answers are correct. Mes says June 20, Rednax says June 22, Shalyn says July 4, Garth says July 23, I tend to work things out in my head by multiplying by an easier number that will get me close, then working from there.
I started from the number of seconds in a day, 86,, then multiplied that in stages to get to days, and so on. Dan says July 23, If you meant the. Dan says July 24, Tinmvf says August 5, Roger says September 16, Udana says October 12, Gerber says October 14, Jong-Ku says November 23, Woo Kun Foo says November 23, Parker says December 21, Dan says December 21, Jill says January 5, Or is that the wrong way to set up the problem??
Thanks to anyone with insight!! Whart says January 25, Garima says February 9, Unknown says February 9, S ome people believe that life is not about how many breaths you take, but instead how many moments take your breath away. Spend some time today with those you love.
Seconds tick by and turn into minutes. Minutes turn into hours, and hours turn into days. The days turn into years and, before you know it, time has flown by. Have you ever made a split-second decision? You were going to do X, but then…at the last second…you changed your mind and did Y instead. Maybe it was choosing the path less traveled instead of the wide road. Whatever the reason, mere seconds can be well spent and change lives forever.
Have you ever stopped to consider how many seconds you have? For example, how many seconds do we have in a day? A month? A whole year? A wise man once said that there are 12 seconds in a year. January 2nd, February 2nd, March 2nd…OK, you get the picture. To convert a certain quantity to a different unit of measure, we need to figure out what is called the conversion factor. To do this, we need to come up with a ratio — or fraction — that equals one.
In the ratio, the conversion factor is a multiplier that gets applied to the larger unit to convert it into the smaller unit through multiplication. Sound confusing? A simple example will make things clear. We have the second, the minute, the hour, the day, the month and the year.
To convert years to the next smallest unit — the month — we have to know how many months are in a year. So, the conversion factor is If we want to know how many months are in 5 years, we just need to multiply the number of years by the conversion factor. Easy enough, right? To figure out even smaller units, you can keep doing multiple conversions to smaller and smaller units.
For example, there are 24 hours in each day, but not all months have the same number of days. So…drum roll, please…one year would equal times 24 times 60 times 60 seconds…or 31,, seconds! What will you do with YOUR seconds? Try It Out. Ready to put some of your precious seconds to good use? Check out these fun ways to spend quality time together as a family:. Play some fun Backyard Games! Watch those seconds turn into minutes and then into hours as you play fun games with your friends and family members right in your own backyard.
Time spent with friends and family is always time well spent, so find a game that you can all enjoy and play the day away! Why not become tourists in your own city? Have you seen all there is to see in your local area? There always seem to be those little places that you never seem to get around to visiting.
Find a new place to explore today. Or you could also make a family meal together! When you get home, turn on some music and get cooking in the kitchen. Enjoy your time together.
Bake some cookies, grab a glass of milk and snuggle up together to read some of your favorite stories together. Up for a challenge? Head to the kitchen and get out a set of measuring cups and spoons. Using these items, experiment on your own to figure out how the units convert from one to another. How many teaspoons are in a tablespoon?
Feel free to use the Internet to research conversion tables for these units of measurement to determine whether your best guesses were accurate or not. Mya says February 10, Rick says February 11, Scotty M says March 5,
0コメント