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  2. Turned A - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turned_a

    Turned a in William Pryce's Archaeologia Cornu-Britannica, 1790. Because of the relative ease of creating this letterform using traditional printing methods, it had frequent and varied historical uses. According to the principle of acrophony, the letter A originated from the Proto-Sinaitic alphabet as a symbol representing the head of an ox or ...

  3. Calculator added up to fun for a math phobic kid in the ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/calculator-added-fun-math-phobic...

    Apparently, if you input certain numbers and turned the calculator upside-down, it formed amusing words. Well, amusing to us anyway. If you punched in 71077345 and flipped the device, it gave a ...

  4. List of logic symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_logic_symbols

    propositional logic, Boolean algebra, first-order logic. ⊥ {\displaystyle \bot } denotes a proposition that is always false. The symbol ⊥ may also refer to perpendicular lines. The proposition. ⊥ ∧ P {\displaystyle \bot \wedge P} is always false since at least one of the two is unconditionally false. ∀.

  5. Heart symbol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_symbol

    Heart symbol. The heart symbol is an ideograph used to express the idea of the "heart" in its metaphorical or symbolic sense. Represented by an anatomically inaccurate shape, the heart symbol is often used to represent the center of emotion, including affection and love, especially romantic love.

  6. Mathematical joke - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mathematical_joke

    Mathematical joke. A mathematical joke is a form of humor which relies on aspects of mathematics or a stereotype of mathematicians. The humor may come from a pun, or from a double meaning of a mathematical term, or from a lay person's misunderstanding of a mathematical concept. Mathematician and author John Allen Paulos in his book Mathematics ...

  7. Rotated question and exclamation marks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotated_question_and...

    The upside-down (also inverted, turned or rotated) question mark ¿ and exclamation mark ¡ are punctuation marks used to begin interrogative and exclamatory sentences or clauses in Spanish and some languages that have cultural ties with Spain, such as Asturian and Waray. [ 1] The initial marks are mirrored at the end of the sentence or clause ...

  8. Astrological symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrological_symbols

    The symbol for the centaur Chiron, ⚷, is both a key and a monogram of the letters O and K (for 'Object Kowal', a provisional name of the object, for discoverer Charles T. Kowal) was proposed by astrologer Al Morrison, who presented the symbol as "an inspiration shared amongst Al H. Morrison, Joelle K.D. Mahoney, and Marlene Bassoff."

  9. Up tack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Up_tack

    Up tack. The up tack or falsum ( ⊥, \bot in LaTeX, U+22A5 in Unicode [1]) is a constant symbol used to represent: The truth value 'false', or a logical constant denoting a proposition in logic that is always false (often called "falsum" or "absurdum"). The bottom type in type theory, which is the bottom element in the subtype relation.