4:11 - What you’re looking at is a multipart equation. To break it down: 1 - You do the part in brackets first. The first one comes to 10, and the second one is six. 2 - You then multiply the two together. 10x6=60. 3 - You go to choose 60, but discover that it’s not an option.
For anybody who doesn't know the order of operations, it goes: Brackets, Exponents, Division, Multiplication, Addition, Subtraction, Or bedmas for short. Also the Division, and Multiplication depend on which one is further to the left, same with the addition, and Subtraction.
@@paradoxwastaken yeah where did pemdas even come from thats a whole group of people doing basic order of arithmetic wrong, division is before multiplication. Oh and ive also been using *BODMAS* in which O stands for order of exponents so basically the same as Bedmas but sounds a littoe better
I had an English teacher who used to only accept an answer to a question if we answered with confidence. Even if we were incorrect. I wish I could have showed her this subreddit to show her how wrong she was
I was on her side until you said even if you were incorrect. I can see some logic in as far as saying, you answer but do you second guess if the teacher asks "Is it?".
I feel like Robin's voice is slightly out of sync with his face, but I don't know if that's really true or if it's just my brain's natural reaction to seeing his moving face.
9 subreddit suggestions: Robin: -r/sbubby -r/KidsAre*******Stupid (doing this subreddit would be a good opportunity to add back Damien’s videos of it) Jack: -r/ComedyCemetery -r/garfieldminusgarfield -r/BreadStapledToTrees Lexi: -r/notlikeothergirls -r/forbiddensnacks -r/Chadtopia -r/ofcoursethatsathing This is my 346th day of doing this, hope they're all done soon.
I've had a confidently incorrect moment in my life (musically). During University Jazz Band, there was a trumpet Soli with a B flat (key sig) whole note. For some reason, I thought it was B natural and I picked that note out of every note in the Soli to be extremely confident and loud with. Welp... my director immediately snapped his head to me the second I played and I felt dumber than a rock.
As a musician (a percussionist) I've had a handful of times where I've come in a beat early after a rest, so I just hit something really loud one beat before everyone else and screw up that run, lol
1:56 There was a Calvin and Hobbes comic where Calvin's father told him the sun was the same size as a quarter, then held up a quarter and compared them side by side. Calvin said "There's something wrong with his logic, but I don't know what"
its kinda correct btw, the term "asian" is just too broad. you know that asian continent is from arabian peninsula to japan right? if you say that someone is asian, which asian is it? its like saying that someone from the states are the same with someone from brazil because they are "american"
The whole tweet was awful. First of all, they separated America into, apparently, USA and South America, as if Mexico, Cuba, Canada, Etc. Didn't exist or even know about football. Secondly, Messi it's literally from Argentina, a south american country, like????? He plays in the national team?????? And thirdly, it's literally one of the most known football players of the world. That tweet made mad.
No, you can not become immune to poison ivy through exposure. The component of poison ivy that causes the red itchy rash is urushiol. Our sensitivity to it can change with age but that is not related to exposure and we can not become totally immune.
@@jessicataylor7174 mind watching the mythbusters episode where they wanted to test cures and and literally only one member of the crew who wasnt deadly allergic to it was even affected? yes you can be immune, and immunity to anything can come from exposure to it as your body takes the exposure and develops a counter response that is NOT the normal reaction.
@@pulsefel9210 Either link the episode so I can see the full experiment or cite the scientific paper proving that, because I have no evidence of that and suspect you may not be understanding the experiment. I will gladly admit I am wrong if you provide evidence to show that, otherwise I can't comment on a 'mythbusters episode' that I've neither heard of nor seen.
If those African Warriors could see smell and hear 3.5 miles away before the Europeans made them captives, then how did the Europeans catch them in the first place?
What exactly were the objects, sounds and smells they could detect from that distance? The sun and moon is much further away. I doubt they would se an insect from that distance. Even if you can see something from long distance doesn't mean you can see it behind a tree. Even if they could detect Europeans from that distance, doesn't mean they would know they're not trustworthy or more fearsome than other native humans. That post is very little specific
6:28 soldiers aren't allowed to take personal belongings from dead soldiers. Weapons/equipment are okay because ya know survival but you can't just steal their shit
I had to do a double take at the emoji math one... But it checks out. The Multiple Choice one was just infuriating... Like who designs those and why did they fail basic math?
8:10 so, I'm betting it's someone who grew up with the imperial system, who doesn't know a kilo(gram) is a unit of weight and thinks it might be a unit of volume.
the actual answer to the buffman math problem is 78, 3 dumbells (buffman is holding one) still is 18+1 buffman or 5 + 3 from the mask he's wearing is 26, 26x3=78
hmm, but aren’t the dumbbells different in the last line? like the 3rd line had 3 things on each side and the last line’s dumbbells only had 2, making this problem impossible
@@shiyuanwang1051 It's still 3 dumbbells, 2 in the first image, 1 held by the buffman >.> if each of those 3 dumbbells is 6, as determined in the dumbbell + dumbbell + dumbbell = 18, then 3 dumbbells in the last equation is Still 18. The 2 together is 12 (6+6=12), & the one held by the buffman is another 6, 6+12=18 >.> I hate to feel like I have to ask this, but do you understand math or how to separate out items in a pic?
Well no, it’s 54, of course I am assuming all the dumbbells equal 6 but if you assume every dumbbell equals six and them looking different is purely a mistake (because it most likely is) then it’s 54
But it is illegal to loot a dead body? Especially in war, that counts as taking trophies/spoils of war, which I fairly certain is a war crime. Someone more knowledgeable can correct me if I'm wrong.
It most certainly is illegal and a war crime. It has always happened but it has always been looting and illegal and they all knew it. So anyone bragging 'hey look what I got' should have been met with a charge. Sadly that didn't happen in WW2 and likely still doesn't but now they keep quiet. As far as dogtags, they're supposed to be collected for identification if bodies can't be moved. Either your side or the enemy to be passed on to the high ups but never as trophies for individuals.
I am scared for humanity, there are way too many individuals with this thinking pattern, and there are so many more than those in these videos Great vid though
3:03 "Immunity" to poison ivy is a thing actually! Although its more like most people are allergic to it, and some aren't. Its hereditary! But yeah Matt, its not small pox. If you were affected by it when you were younger, then its not gonna change lmaooo Everyone was in fact waiting for that moment
4:46 the answer is 54 by the way (this is not a joke that is the answer if this was a real math problem) Buff guy=5 Mask =3 Weigh=6 In the bottom there are two weighs witch equals 12 Next to that is a buff guy WITH a mask and WEIGHT so 5+3+6 Now times that by the mask (3) 12+(5+3+6)×3=54
nah nah mate, you're forgetting the order of operations, you gotta do multiplication/division before you do addition/subtraction plus the dude also has a weight in his hand, the equation should look something like this 12 + (5+3+6) x 3 = 54 edit: 5+3 also isn't 9, it's 8
Is- Is the uterus- Not part of the vagina? (I'm female and cis but I don't tend to remember anatomy so-) EDIT: looked up a diagram. I thought "vagina" just referred to the entirety of the female anatomy. I'm 18 and graduated in May. Help
yknow i never really internalized how any of the people at emkay actually have faces. i always just imagined them as disembodied voices with no physical form
7:38 just gonna point out that even though this is incorrect, I think it's quite understandable to think that. As a guy, we are taught absolutely jack shit about the anatomy of women and have to learn this type of stuff ourselves.
Random Pokémon fact: Chansey and Happiny have the lowest base Attack and Defense of all Pokémon, with a small 5. On the other side of the spectrum, Mega Mewtwo X has the highest base attack, with an outstanding 190, and the title for the highest base Defense is a 3-way tie, between Shuckle, Mega Steelix and Mega Aggron, who all have a base Defense of 230.
I have many questions. 1) How does a tiny little turtle with a thin shell that makes berry juice have the same amount of base Defense as a huge Pokémon MADE OF STEEL? 2) How does a tiny little turtle with a thin shell that makes berry juice have the same amount of base Defense as a very bulky Pokémon wearing nearly indestructible rocks for armor? 3) How does Arceus, the literal GOD OF POKÉMON, not have the highest base attack?
@@monadoninja Yeah Shuckle is like a pseudo legendary when it comes to that stat but fights with him (both on your side and on the opponents side) take forever because the rest of his stats are so bad. He's cute tho.
Fun fact: the way poison ivy generally works is that the more you've been exposed to it, the less resistance you have to it. So people can develop the sensitivity over time. Like if you clear the entirety of your yard of it, you'll probably start getting it going forward.
Well to help you a bit Robin, and I defiantly know how you feel about math uh...lol. At 4:16, it says what is (8+2) x (2+4)? The r/Confidentlyincorrect part is the answers...it's saying 80 is the correct answer, but that's not the answer at all. 8+2 = 10, 2+4 = 6. So (10 x 6 = 60) Not 80, yet the answers are only showing 16, 80, 32 and 48 lol. Also can we all take a moment and appreciate how handsome Robin is? lol. Finally, we get to see the myth, the legend! That Robin isn't actually a talking bird! :P
Hermglf, herligd, yuwkm (Apologies for his behaviour, Kingsley's brain is recovering from trying to understand that, it'll take a bit, so don't mind me!) (Update: he seems to have healed! Let's see....) Huh? Wha? What happened? (You were in a recovery from thought overload) Again? (Yup) Well, at least I healed (Yeah) (Oh, btw, name's bran)
3M=9 | M=3 3D=18 | D=6 2D+(D+M+Buff Guy)*3=? 12+(27+3BG)=? 39+3BG=? Which to get 54 BG would have to equal 5, which I'm not sure how I got there. I'm sure I was making a joke but since I made it over a year ago and not even I know what I was saying, I'm gonna chalk this up to being something stupid
Eh, you kind of lost the plot with the whole 'stealing from corpses' thing being wrong or something. I mean, what's the difference between robbing the corpse of your next door neighbor and robbing the ancient tombs in Egypt? Is there a certain amount of time passing that makes grave robbing okay? If so, how much? Or is it okay because the corpses were already buried so thus it's not corpse robbing, but grave robbing? Just gonna say, unless it's a matter of life and death I don't see any excuse for taking something from a corpse as excusable. Though if we're in some kind of Apocalypse scenario and my next-door neighbor has the same shoe size as me, I'm taking it for later use.
I think one difference is that when someone died thousands of years ago, there is no way someone could take take advance of them dying earlier than their full lifespan (therefore being a possible motif for murder). And there also would be no living friends or family members of that person who may get personally upset about it. Plus when its ancient, it has archeological value and is therefore something that ought to be kept and maybe studied
"I couldn't care less; implies you couldn't, but did" "I could care less; implies you could, but didn't" correct me if I'm wrong, cuz I might be (don't correct me on my use of semi-colons tho, but idrc either way)
No ... they mean .... "I couldn't care less" ... and ... "I could care less" ... There's no implications or deeper meaning, they are straight forward normal English sentences. The first means they can't care any less than they do (so zero caring) and the second means they could care less than they do. (greater than zero caring)
@@Redbeardian I mean, that's what I was trying to explain. But you're not mistaken either, since it wouldn't not be literal. Although if you do say something about it, you would've at least minded enough to do so even if you may not care much. So in that regard, yes, it's implied. Literally? Like you said, the latter would already have something to care less about, but otherwise, no. Sorry for missing that though, it totally flew over my head
6:18 It is allowed to take some stuff from the enemy, but taking their personal belongings is frowned upon, but most likely a lot of soldiers have at least done this once. It honestly all depends on the military
The fact that he searched "ice cream in butthole :(", is concerning. The fact that google says THERE IS 21,100,000 RESULTS ON SCREEN IS EVEN MORE CONCERNING.
I have a “confidently incorrect” story XD So I was scrolling through Pinterest and I found something saying that some DJs almost got arrested because they said on the radio that the wells were contaminated with dihydrogen monoxide. So ofc I looked at the comments. The second commenter said something along the lines of “we don’t use prefixes for naming compounds, at least for the first element, and if it’s valency balanced we don’t use one for the second either” now I am a huge chemistry geek and I’m not even sure “valency” is even a word XD. So I commented on that telling them that no prefixes is the rules for ionic compounds, which are nonmetals and metals with an electronegativity greater than 2, and that H2O is a covalent compound because it’s two nonmetals with an electronegativity less than 1.6 and with covalent compounds you use prefixes for all elements unless the first one is just one, then the first one doesn’t have a prefix and the rest do. So the correct nomenclature for H2O is indeed dihydrogen monoxide XD
Fun fact: granite glows under pressure. Earthquake lights are a thing. The huge empty granite sarcophagus in Egypt by some, are theorized to cause the sky above to glow back when they were first "used"
4:10 The correct answer is 60, which isn't on the board (8+2)x(2+4) Because Brackets have to be solved first, this creates "8+2=10" and "2+4=6", so you'd get 10 x 6 which is 60.