You will be shown 10 random numbers between 1 and 100 without knowing what's next. Your task is to put them in order! But beware, if a number cannot be placed, the quiz ends...
I definitely don't consume it, but still knew what it contained...however couldn't spell it for the life of me. Please accept more type-ins, I tried a pack of them -- aspratame, aspertame, aspritame, asperitame, asperitame, aspretame ad nauseam :P
Also, any chance you could accept "perfect square" for "perfect cube"? That's what I know it as. (For the record I don't consume those either -- choking hazard).
It would have been so easy to look this up and not look foolish, but you go ahead and believe what you want to believe. For the record, invented in 1906 in San Francisco by a Japanese immigrant.
I also tried to put Japan... It is my understanding that they became a thing in the US when the Japanese were put in internment camps during the war and Chinese restaurant owners took over the Japanese restaurants and began using their cookie presses
Every source I look up online says Japan is where fortune cookies originated. Even if there is controversy over the actual origination point, wikipedia articles, where many answers for these quizzes come from, point to Japan, not the US.
"The exact origin of fortune cookies is unclear, though various immigrant groups in California claim to have popularized them in the early 20th century. They most likely originated from cookies made by Japanese immigrants to the United States in the late 19th or early 20th century."
The most popular theory is that they were created in California, by immigrants from Japan. However, it seems that there are so many stories it's hard to sort the facts from the anecdotes.
A perfect cube is a number whose cube root is an integer. A cube is any number that has a cube root. I am only a 7th grader so please check me on this.
(not sure we ever covered this in school, but we definitely did not learn the English word for it. But I am now at a stage where newly learned English terms are replacing some of my originally learned Dutch terms haha)
If the Dutch education system is any good (and I'm sure it is), I find it hard to believe that you didn't learn about cubes, and I am not surprised that you didn't know the English word 'cube'.
However, you're here doing quizzes in English, so why the desperate need to tell us that you have learnt the correct English word haha?
For pity's sake.
"The exact origin of fortune cookies is unclear, though various immigrant groups in California claim to have popularized them in the early 20th century. They most likely originated from cookies made by Japanese immigrants to the United States in the late 19th or early 20th century."
Shouldn't be 9, instead of 8?
2×2×2 = 8
3×3×3 = 16
9 is not a cube number, but a square number (3×3)
(not sure we ever covered this in school, but we definitely did not learn the English word for it. But I am now at a stage where newly learned English terms are replacing some of my originally learned Dutch terms haha)
However, you're here doing quizzes in English, so why the desperate need to tell us that you have learnt the correct English word haha?