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This is a list of notable theorems.Lists of theorems and similar statements include: List of algebras; List of algorithms; List of axioms; List of conjectures
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However the exam papers of the GCSE sometimes had a choice of questions, designed for the more able and the less able candidates. When introduced the GCSEs were graded from A to G, with a C being set as roughly equivalent to an O-Level Grade C or a CSE Grade 1 and thus achievable by roughly the top 25% of each cohort.
D.A. – D.B.A. – D.U.I. – D.W.I. – Damages – Damnation – Dangerous weapon – Data protection – Date rape – Daubert standard – Day in court – de bonis asportatis – de bonis non administratis – de facto – De facto corporation – de futuro – de integro – de jure – De jure corporation – de lege ferenda – de lege lata – de minimis – de novo – Deadlock ...
A table showing approximate equivalences between the GCSE grading systems and its predecessors, the O-Level and CSE. Template parameters [Edit template data] Parameter Description Type Status No parameters specified The above documentation is transcluded from Template:GCSE grades/doc. (edit | history) Editors can experiment in this template's sandbox (create | mirror) and testcases (create ...
English: A mocked-up front page of a late-2010s GCSE English Language exam paper. I created this, taking inspiration from AQA and OCR's Summer 2018 papers, to ilustrate the GCSE Wikipedia article - because none of the real papers will be out of copyright for many decades to come.
De Morgan's laws represented with Venn diagrams.In each case, the resultant set is the set of all points in any shade of blue. In propositional logic and Boolean algebra, De Morgan's laws, [1] [2] [3] also known as De Morgan's theorem, [4] are a pair of transformation rules that are both valid rules of inference.
A vector treated as an array of numbers by writing as a row vector or column vector (whichever is used depends on convenience or context): = (), = Index notation allows indication of the elements of the array by simply writing a i, where the index i is known to run from 1 to n, because of n-dimensions. [1]