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Number of years that it took Harper Lee to write To Kill a Mockingbird And just for kicks: 1: To Kill a Mockingbird's ranking by an organization of British librarians on a list of books that ...
To Kill a Mockingbird is a 1960 novel by American author Harper Lee. It became instantly successful after its release; in the United States, it is widely read in high schools and middle schools. To Kill a Mockingbird won the Pulitzer Prize a year after its release, and it has become a classic of modern American literature.
In number theory, the Heegner theorem [1] establishes the complete list of the quadratic imaginary number fields whose rings of integers are principal ideal domains. It solves a special case of Gauss's class number problem of determining the number of imaginary quadratic fields that have a given fixed class number.
Let A 1 be the set whose elements are the numbers b 1, ab 1, a 2 b 1, ..., a k − 1 b 1 reduced modulo p. Then A 1 has k distinct elements because otherwise there would be two distinct numbers m, n ∈ {0, 1, ..., k − 1} such that a m b 1 ≡ a n b 1 (mod p), which is impossible, since it would follow that a m ≡ a n (mod p).
Atticus Finch is a fictional character and the protagonist of Harper Lee's Pulitzer Prize–winning novel of 1960, To Kill a Mockingbird.A preliminary version of the character also appears in the novel Go Set a Watchman, written in the mid-1950s but not published until 2015.
A past paper is an examination paper from a previous year or previous years, usually used either for exam practice or for tests such as University of Oxford, [1] [2] University of Cambridge [3] College Collections. Exam candidates find past papers valuable in test preparation.
The class of Hilbert systems, [2] of which the most famous example is the 1928 Hilbert–Ackermann system of first-order logic; Gerhard Gentzen 's calculus of natural deduction , which is the first formalism of structural proof theory , and which is the cornerstone of the formulae-as-types correspondence relating logic to functional programming ;
Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960. Instantly successful, widely read in middle and high schools in the United States, it has become a classic of modern American literature, winning the Pulitzer Prize. [1]